Bruce Banner Autos day 57 trouble in flower.

SparkyTHC

New Member
Bruce Banner Autos I got from QCS planted in a 5 gallon cloth pot, grown indoors under a 600 watt led until June 1st when I moved it outside.

I use Promix BX as my medium and Gaia Green organic dry amendments 444 and 284 1TBS each per Gallon.(5).
Water with a Ph of 6.3-6.8 when it doesn't rain and only when needed.

Can anyone tell me whats wrong with her, this is my first plant.
 

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GrnMtnGrowr

Well-Known Member
Looks like a deficiency and since most deficiencies look similar I would suggest Cal-Mag to start with, it really can't hurt. No clue what thos enutes were you mentioned but sounds like you were not giving the plant much, at that size it really wouldn't need hardly any. What water are you using? Extreme ph swing could cause this too. usually it's anybodiesguess and I'm sure you will get posts telling you every possible problem and solution. Welcome to figuring out how to grow!
 

Andino

Member
Did you do a progressive acclimatation from indoor to outdoor? or did you put directly under sun? and how is the weather there?
 

Logan Burke

Well-Known Member
If you didn't slowly transition it, I'm sure that some of this is due to the shock of sun exposure. But I'm also seeing what would look to be something of a Mg deficiency in the lower growth there. That pro-mix, IF I am correct, is primarily peat moss and has a tendency to become acidic after awhile. I'd make sure your PH is on point. In actual soil, most people say PH isn't a huge concern. Are you feeding any nutes at all at this point? If not, and your PH is correct, I'd do as GrnMtnGrowr suggested and start applying a calmag product. Work from a quarter strength on up to full if the symptoms persist. If by the full dose their symptoms haven't at least slowed down, it may not be the culprit.
 

SparkyTHC

New Member
If you didn't slowly transition it, I'm sure that some of this is due to the shock of sun exposure. But I'm also seeing what would look to be something of a Mg deficiency in the lower growth there. That pro-mix, IF I am correct, is primarily peat moss and has a tendency to become acidic after awhile. I'd make sure your PH is on point. In actual soil, most people say PH isn't a huge concern. Are you feeding any nutes at all at this point? If not, and your PH is correct, I'd do as GrnMtnGrowr suggested and start applying a calmag product. Work from a quarter strength on up to full if the symptoms persist. If by the full dose their symptoms haven't at least slowed down, it may not be the culprit.
fed them calmag yesterday, its been mostly sunny 25C only a few rains.
 
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