Posting again got no answers

Robert venneri

Active Member
I have a few plants in my garden
All get same light, water ,nutes all doing good
One of them has something going on with the tops any ideas
It has been extremely hot and dry in ny this summer
Also the same plant has some leaves coming in white. Not mildew . The leaves are white not green
Any ideas
 

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TheTerpinator

Well-Known Member
Looks like mildew on 3. Humid in your area?
Edit: read too fast: "It has been extremely hot and dry in ny this summer"

"All get same light, water ,nutes all doing good"
So I guess the question would be how much light, water, nutrients are they all getting?
 
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Robert venneri

Active Member
Looks like mildew on 3. Humid in your area?
Edit: read too fast: "It has been extremely hot and dry in ny this summer"

"All get same light, water ,nutes all doing good"
So I guess the question would be how much light, water, nutrients are they all getting?
yes very humid
Anythig i can do to fix
Should i cut all the droppy stuff off
 

Robert venneri

Active Member

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CavanalCannabis

Well-Known Member
They look hot and thirsty, but make sure to not overwater. What genetics? That’s some wicked variegation, almost like a mosaic virus. Maybe foliar in evening with some Epsom salts, like a teaspoon in a gallon of water sprayed over/under it pretty good.
 

Robert venneri

Active Member
the strain are seeds i got from a freind he said it was a big purple sativa grown at a college i saw the weed last year and it was the most purple i have ever seen
 

BongerChonger

Well-Known Member
yes very humid
Anythig i can do to fix
Should i cut all the droppy stuff off
Something's got it. Pest or disease. Give it a really close inspection.

If it's nothing above ground, it might be root related if you've been watering often while it's been hot.
Ground maybe staying a bit soggy a foot or two down, if you've been watering thoroughly and often.
Root rot can give off the impression the soil needs more water.

If you've noticed the symptoms spread, I don't personally see the harm in removing the affected plant material.
Sometimes better to be safe than sorry and if it didn't reappear, you could probably call it a win.

I'm not personally sure what it is. But my own instinct says remove it and watch to see if it reappears.
 

Herb & Suds

Well-Known Member
If it’s not under attack by rodents
All drooping is the result of under or over watering
In this years climate my bet is that beast is hard to water enough in a raised bed
Water it daily for a long spell each day and check progress
At least we know it’s not overwatered
As we sweat :joint:
 
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