nute burn? pix attached

ganjaluvr

Well-Known Member
is she flowering yet?

if so.. how far into flowering is she?

plants will do this with their fan leafs as they age.. its totally normal.

Eventually, if you let the plant mature long enough.. the fan leafs will start turning yellowish.. and start to die off.

And eventually fall off the plant on their own time. The plan is getting closer to harvest.. and doesn't need as many fan leafs

any longer.. and they die off.

Hope that helped you out a little.

But to know for sure.. we need to know how old the plant is.

peace.
 

freshpl

Well-Known Member
I attached the grow journal with more pix on the second page.

month in from seed.
I have not FIMed or cut the plant in any way I plan on vegging for another month.
Can I add nutes the next time I water? Or should I wait 2 waterings.

cheers
 

buraka415

Active Member
@dnugs - really? depending on what? I use coco and canna nutes, and I feed almost every single time. Others often feed every other time they water. I know that is a common sched in soil. Water, Feed, off, water, feed, off, etc.. I mean, really we should be monitoring our plants for what they want.. not a schedule. I've learned this the hard way. who knows.
 
i agree with buraka i use the canna range for soil and for all my grows i feed them evry time exept for every two weeks i give them just a ph balanced water, and ive never had nute burn, the plants i grow all take a good feeding though so it may be that strain doesnt like much feeding.....or......not wanting to pour oil on the fire but it could be at that feed rate there not getting enough but cross reference and cross reference again cos i dont want to be the reason for it getting worse, cheeeers
 

jimbizzzale67123

Well-Known Member
PH imbalance, this can cause the plant to look burned sometimes. Make sure ur PH is balanced if u aren't sure pick up some limestone its cheap as hell in nursery or lowes.
 

mouthmeetsoap

Active Member
Either way, I believe he was asking if his burnt leaves would ever recover, to which the answer is no. To see if the problem is corrected, watch new growth. If it hasn't gone to any other leaves, you fixed the problem.
 
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