Suggestions?

I have 7 plants that I started on a really bad light, I have upgraded the light and this is what said plants look like now.


Does anybody have any suggestions, and are the ones that have completely leaned over worth growing still? Or should I remove them for the sake of space? Thanks.

2 Likes

Hello and welcome to the Growers Network Family. We are very glad you are here with us. You couldn’t come at a better time than now! The community will help you out!

•Starting with a support ticket will help strengthen your growing abilities. It will help you guide your next grows with prev data that you can build from.

This is a support ticket. Copy and paste it to your thread and fill it out to the best of your abilities. The community will help with any questions you may have.

Grow Journal Check List

Seedbank:
Strain (bagseed too):
Indoor, outdoor:
Tent, Room Size:
Lighting:
Light height:
Temps (day and night):
Relative Humidity (day and night) :
Added Air (fans, portable acs, heaters, dehumidifiers) :
Ventilation:
Pot sizes:
Soil, Coco, or Dwc:
Nutrient type:
Ph numbers:
Ec and PPM:
Water Temps:
Co2:

Seed germination date:
Veg duration:
Nutrient cycles (how often feed/water):

Fill this out. It will provide many more topics to discuss in your Thread/Room. You keep all your info in the one place. Every time you post in your thread, it goes to the top of the pile and you get more interactions.

1 Like

Before deciding, check if the leaning plants are healthy and productive. If they’re not contributing much, removing them could give other plants more space and resources.

2 Likes

I have resolved the leaning issue by letting the plants grow in with stakes. They have been doing really good for the past couple days, but today I noticed these yellow and brown spots. I use general hydroponics floratrio, 5ml of gro, 10ml of bloom, and 15ml of micro if I remember correctly. I watered all of the plants last night and transplanted the 3 plants currently in the fabric pot from their starter cups beforehand. I believe it may be “lensing” or letting drops of water sit on the leaves and the light burning them, but I really don’t know. I have raised the light a few inches since spotting the issue. Also, the fabric pot plants were in soil and are now in coir.

Uploading: IMG_0554.jpeg…
Uploading: IMG_0553.jpeg…
Uploading: IMG_0552.jpeg…
Uploading: IMG_0551.jpeg…
Processing: IMG_0550.jpeg…

2 Likes





2 Likes

Are those the same stretchy ones?

1 Like

Yes this is them

2 Likes

Very nice. Much improvement. The spots might just be built up nutes burning the plants. Do you have a water cycle?

1 Like


No, I would like to implement one, but to be completely honest I have just been watering them as I see needed, which I think I’m messing up with.

2 Likes

I usually go by lifting after feeding vs light and dry, they look good!

1 Like


Got another 100w dimmable light put in today

2 Likes

I feed , feed , water. That way there is always a flushing(ish) timeframe throughout the growing.

1 Like

I inly use general hydroponics flotation in the water. So it’s just watering and learning the plants needs

1 Like

?? no idea what flotation is? Do you mean you are using GH nutrients?

They look great from the little ones that were stretching and falling over. Good job of saving them.

Marty

1 Like

Floratrio*^ autocorrect

1 Like