Nute burn. She is overfed. Stop feeding anything other than water for a week or 2. A flush would probably be better.
Thank you so much. I kinda thought so but was afraid to flush it at this time. Was gonna flush after trichomes turned white. But I guess I should do it now
@Chainedtiger. Just check your run off numbers at the tail end of the flush and give it a feed right after at the correct ph and ppm.
It will help with recovery.
Give her some light nutes immediately after the flush.
I would give her 1/4 to 1/3 of nutes recommended by the manufacturer going forward. I always feed 1/3 of the recommended schedule (Fox Farms) and my plants do great.
Most manufacturers feed schedules are very aggressive. If your plant is an auto then I would dial the nutes back even a little more. Autos are particularly sensitive to high nute levels.
@Oldguy made a great point. With nute levels that high you are also likely to have pH problems.
Do you have pH and PPM meters? Usually a flush on its own will correct pH, but I would check it anyway.
If in soil you should be running pH close to 6.5. If in coco it should be around 5.8 to 6.0. Most soils will autocorrect on a flush. PPMs should be 800 - 1000, or maybe a little less if an auto.
I’ve had this issue with my WHite widows. Ended up being a calcium deficiency.
filling out support ticket will help
- What strain, Seed bank, or bag seed
- Method: Soil w/salt, Organic soil, Hydroponics, Aquaponics, KNF
- Vessels: Pots, Grow beds, Buckets, Troths
- PH of Water, Solution, runoff (if Applicable)
- PPM/TDS or EC of nutrient solution if applicable
- Indoor or Outdoor
- Light system
- Temps; Day, Night
- Humidity; Day, Night
- Ventilation system; Yes, No, Size
- AC, Humidifier, De-humidifier,
- Co2; Yes, No
Thanks guys, I’ll give her a flush tonight followed up by a lesser amount of nutes. My ph now is around 7.0. I need to bring that down a bit. I have a ph meter, no ppm meter. What are run off numbers, and what does ppm pertain to.
PPM is the concentration of nutes in your soil and it stands for parts per million (PPM.)
Here’s is an adjusted Fox Farms PPM chart, by stage of lifecycle. PPM ranges are in the top third of the chart (3rd row.) These recommended PPMs are valid for whatever fertilizer you use (assuming a soil grow.)
Thank you all for the great advice…happy growing !