yankeegreen
New member
Hello ICMag Forum mates!
I have been auditing the site for some time now and shamefully have not even introduced myself yet. I will get to that in the proper place post crisis management - I promise.
So here's my issue: In the past week the leaves of the sativas have been consistently and quickly yellowing and slight tacoing. I am currently in the 3rd week of flowering a couple sativa doms and an indica dom. They are growing in a medium primarily ProMix BX, FF Ocean Forest, perlite and vermiculite. I am feeding Earth Juice line of nutes, currently Grow (N), Catalyst, Bloom (P) and Hi-Brix (K) as an aerated tea. The ph of the tea is ~5.5 and initial runoff is ~6.4. Lights on temp is ~74*F, off ~60-62. All the above applies to the indica which is thriving quite well.
My initial reaction is that it is an N deficiency as the sativas have been stretching quite a bit the last week, but the tacoing has thrown me a bit. Any observations, suggestions, etc appreciated.
Pics added as attachments. Last pic is the healthy indica, same conditions.
I have been auditing the site for some time now and shamefully have not even introduced myself yet. I will get to that in the proper place post crisis management - I promise.
So here's my issue: In the past week the leaves of the sativas have been consistently and quickly yellowing and slight tacoing. I am currently in the 3rd week of flowering a couple sativa doms and an indica dom. They are growing in a medium primarily ProMix BX, FF Ocean Forest, perlite and vermiculite. I am feeding Earth Juice line of nutes, currently Grow (N), Catalyst, Bloom (P) and Hi-Brix (K) as an aerated tea. The ph of the tea is ~5.5 and initial runoff is ~6.4. Lights on temp is ~74*F, off ~60-62. All the above applies to the indica which is thriving quite well.
My initial reaction is that it is an N deficiency as the sativas have been stretching quite a bit the last week, but the tacoing has thrown me a bit. Any observations, suggestions, etc appreciated.
Pics added as attachments. Last pic is the healthy indica, same conditions.