Are they gone after transplant

They were overwatered and wilted , so i transplanted them in another pot for transplsnting i just fill thewholegrow medium with water snd them dig some soil and them pulled off the plant, and them fed some trochoderma snd put them under darkness for eight hours with humidty between 50-60% , are they alive or gone or they have been more wilted bcoz of trsnsplant shock the first image is before and second one is after , the before image is when I transplanted them
 

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Johiem

Well-Known Member
She looked like she was hungry. Need more info. What was she planted in to begin with? What did you plant her into? What have you been feeding her? How often have you been watering her?
 
That plant is gone, I would now know about how much yield can i get under 400w led grow light, light name:- California lightworks solarextreme500
 

Herb & Suds

Well-Known Member
ive never heard of anything 20-20-20 for growing ganja
You look like you are burning them
Probably not the right micronutrients and a heavy hand on calmag
Are you in soil?
 

jasonryan00

Well-Known Member
@pabloescobar1949 i intentionally didn't give this plant water to illustrate that comparing it to your picture they look underwatered not overwatered. after about an hour or two after restoring adequate moisture to the medium, the limp branches will go back to normal.
it could be why your lower leaves are yellowing and suffering necrosis
but by thinking it's overwatered and not giving it water to "let it dry out" you could be letting the plant wilt to the point of no return.
as long as the medium has adequate drainage it would take a significant amount of water to "waterlog" the medium.
give the plants some water and then come back and see how it responds
just my 2 cents


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jasonryan00

Well-Known Member
Can anyone tell what is this and why, i am using NPK 20-20-20 and ph in range of 6 from today and before in between 7-7.4 , now watering in every 2 days around 2 litres , i think second photo of plsnt's top could be bcoz of light bcoz light was placed around 16 inches from plant
i think those issues could be caused from the high PH. Why were you using PH 7-7.4? when you get towards 7.5 PH micro nutrients like Iron, Manganese, Boron, Copper and Zinc become significantly less available. High PH might also make nutrients unavailable even though they are present in the form of fertilizer in this case. From what i can see you are using a soil base so the PH should be around 6.5. if you get down to 6.0 phosphorous, calcium and magnesium become much less available to the plant. Also going that low can lock out other nutrients.
run some pure PH 6.5 water through the medium a couple times to flush toxicity if it was present let the plant find equilibrium again and then return to a diluted nutrient solution and the ramp it up slowly

In your second post on the second picture i say that is nutrient toxicity or deficiency making the tips burn like that not the light. If a lights gets to close to foliage it doesn't only burn the tips like that, all exposed foliage will suffer burn and necrosis
 
@pabloescobar1949 i intentionally didn't give this plant water to illustrate that comparing it to your picture they look underwatered not overwatered. after about an hour or two after restoring adequate moisture to the medium, the limp branches will go back to normal.
it could be why your lower leaves are yellowing and suffering necrosis
but by thinking it's overwatered and not giving it water to "let it dry out" you could be letting the plant wilt to the point of no return.
as long as the medium has adequate drainage it would take a significant amount of water to "waterlog" the medium.
give the plants some water and then come back and see how it responds
just my 2 cents


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Thank you for your suggestion, why I am saying is overwatered bcoz when I touched the soil it was like mud full of water and water was not draining properly and for worst water got still in the lower plate under the plant for 2 days, which I think could be root rot, so somehow all these things got bad and plant suffered, you see these images, I think you will understand and see the soil, condition of it
 

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Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
Thank you for your suggestion, why I am saying is overwatered bcoz when I touched the soil it was like mud full of water and water was not draining properly and for worst water got still in the lower plate under the plant for 2 days, which I think could be root rot, so somehow all these things got bad and plant suffered, you see these images, I think you will understand and see the soil, condition of it
you don't water in soil every day, and you don't feed every time you water.
you eventually learn to tell from the weight of the pot, but at first, stick your index finger into the dirt past the second knuckle...if it feels even damp, wait 2 more days to water. add nutes at half of the recommended amount, ph'ed to something close to 6.5. then water again, with NO nutes, twice, before you feed again, using the same stick your finger in the dirt method. if you have a big healthy plant in a slightly small pot, you could have to water every day, but that is uncommon, most of the time, in soil you water about once a week, maybe every 5 days if they're growing good
 
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