Marcom1234
New Member
So….
First grow….
Gorilla glue … grown from clone given to me.
Outdoor grow in 7 gal fabric pots.
Fertilize with fox farm liquids
Currently using Tiger bloom, big bloom plant food, and Bembe every other week.
Flowering for about 4 weeks.
water about every other day based on conditions.
Only real change is last week was super hot and humid. Sunday temps dropped and humidity also. The day before I used sledge hammer. Following directions I just mixed a gallon and used it… that’s it…. That night I read somewhere that after using I should flush with a few gallons of water…. Which i did the following day. I used just straight reverse osmosis water. Which I later read will strip calcium… lol
Kinda a comedy of errors on my part I think. So my best guess is … not flushing out the sledgehammer right away and then using straight reverse osmosis water… probably helped my problem along.
Plant has done perfect all summer. Then I get home Monday from work and a good portion of my leaves have brown areas.
My guess is calcium deficiency?
First grow….
Gorilla glue … grown from clone given to me.
Outdoor grow in 7 gal fabric pots.
Fertilize with fox farm liquids
Currently using Tiger bloom, big bloom plant food, and Bembe every other week.
Flowering for about 4 weeks.
water about every other day based on conditions.
Only real change is last week was super hot and humid. Sunday temps dropped and humidity also. The day before I used sledge hammer. Following directions I just mixed a gallon and used it… that’s it…. That night I read somewhere that after using I should flush with a few gallons of water…. Which i did the following day. I used just straight reverse osmosis water. Which I later read will strip calcium… lol
Kinda a comedy of errors on my part I think. So my best guess is … not flushing out the sledgehammer right away and then using straight reverse osmosis water… probably helped my problem along.
Plant has done perfect all summer. Then I get home Monday from work and a good portion of my leaves have brown areas.
My guess is calcium deficiency?