they dont seem poor little plants to me… they are drinking like crazy, producing big colas, and smelling beautiful… so why say that? just cause they are yellow? it has been all green and lovely until this week 12 and nothing was changed
ph is at 6.3…i know that its probably a nut deficiency, but it should be at the end of her life soon right? is it a hugeee problem? should i just harvest it now?
My friend…those leaves are not yellow because of old age and time to die.
The color and condition of the leaves: wrinkled, brown at tips, curled over, way off color.
The natural color of a healthy dying leaf is slowly going pale yellow till it falls off.
The leaf will not be wrinkled, browned or curled over.
No offense intended. We get pretty plain spoken around here. It’s a good way to learn and make each grow better. good luck
I have had this issue before and it’s a ph- nute issue definitely not normal but not a lot you can do at this stage because it turns and happens fast and when it’s that far along you live and learn but you will have good meds from what you have going let it finish off
I agree will all of the above
We all live and learn
And Hopefully we pass along enough knowledge to each other to help others from making the same silly mistakes
Next grow start a journal so we can follow along and help if needed
Hey everyone, sorry for the lack of reply been real busy with work… however i would like to update as i eventually found out what the problem was…
So i just harvested my plants yesterday and what do i find?! THRIPS! Those tiny mf were all over… i have no idea how i missed them, i check on my babies up close every night :(… anyways all was not lost, still harvested some nice medicine (with probably some thrip poop mixed in ;)) and those little buggers are dying and falling off as i type this
To conclude: if you having the same issue and you know ph or nutes is defo not the problem… really check deep for Thrips… do not let them get out of control like i did…
Some times the young thrips can be green or even translucient, and very difficult to spot on the leaves. Another fun fact, The big ones can bite, hard enough that humans can feel it. If you’ve ever been handling your plants and felt that prick that feels like a thorn or something just pricked you, then you look at your hand and theres nothing, you look at the plant expecting to see a thorn but you know they don’t have any. Yet you know that that just hurt so you look anyway… maybe, a small paper cut is a better way to describe it. Its an adult thrip that just bit you, probly protecting its young. They usually got to get you in a tender spot too, like under a nail or webbing between the fingers. I hate those things.