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Help please! Better photos

JKRON
JKRONstarted grow question 3d ago
Had some white
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00110001001001111O
00110001001001111Oanswered grow question 2d ago
First, stop defoliating just to defoliate. You ahve gaps in canopy. That means you are not capturing as much light as possible. It also makes the plant less robus to nutritional problems. You took off a bunch of stored nutrients that would have given more leeway while diagnosing current issues. LEaves are essential. NEver look for reasons to defoliate. Only remove a leaf when there is a very good reason to do so. Chlorosis can be cause by numerous things. Mg-def would come with spots, so i'd rule that out. Ca deficiency does not cause chlorosis. The progression doesn't look normal for anything, either... spotty all over.. maybe more so at the top which points toward a less mobile nutrient. This may be a form of variegation which there is nothing you can do about it, if that's the case. too much p or k can cause chlorosis in new growth.. usually isn't spotty, though.. again, progression is weird. Some trace elements can cause chlorosis at the top of the plant - Zn or Mn etc - but again.. would be unusual because these things are rarely physically not present in soil and would point more likely toward a pH imbalance in the medium. i'd wager it's something less direct - like ph-imbalance - or genetic mutation impacting pigmentation. unless you've done something really funky in regard to fertilizer balance.
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Amazone27
Amazone27answered grow question 2d ago
Stockstoffmangel würde ich sagen , also Kaffeesatz , gekochtem Bananenschalen Wasser. Mist von Pferd , Schaf und Hühner. Knochenmehl und Urgestein Mehl hilft auch
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Organoman
Organomananswered grow question 2d ago
Now looking like a magnesium deficiency. You should stop cutting leaves off, you are just handicapping your plants by doing this. Just remember.........more leaves = more energy being made = more growth = more yield = more potential.
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m0use
m0useanswered grow question 3d ago
stop defolaiting so much. your setting it back.
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HandsomeTerpz
HandsomeTerpzanswered grow question 3d ago
From the pictures it looks like you might be seeing some light discoloration or spots on the leaves. The overall plant health still seems fine, but the lighter areas could be an early sign of either a nutrient issue (like magnesium or calcium deficiency) or light stress. Make sure your pH is in the right range so nutrients are properly absorbed, and double check the distance of your light to avoid bleaching. It doesn’t look like a pest or mold problem from these photos, more like a mild imbalance that you can correct early. Keep monitoring closely if the white areas spread or get worse, I’d suggest checking your feeding schedule and possibly adding a CalMag supplement. Have fun 😊
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John_Kramer
John_Krameranswered grow question 3d ago
old fans 1-2 weeks ago P deficiency. right now this issue is fixed, the new growth is good there's nothing to do for a while, let it grow... u're good.
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Ultraviolet
Ultravioletanswered grow question 3d ago
Hard one, maybe sulfur, a yellowing or chlorosis that starts on the leaf margins and progresses inward is a characteristic symptom of a sulfur deficiency, buuuut. It looks immobile but effecting all over it seems , makes me lean more towards iron which is still immobile, iron and sulfur deficiencies can show similar initial symptoms of chlorosis (yellowing) in plants, but the key differences are in the affected plant parts. Iron, Yellowing between the veins (interveinal chlorosis) of the leaves, with the veins remaining green. Iron is essential for chlorophyll production, the green pigment in plants which may be why plant seems to be more effected all over. High soil pH (alkaline conditions) often makes iron unavailable to plants, can also make phosphorus binds to iron above a pH of 7. I seen a couple purple stems too which is indicative of p shortage. Worth checking out pH make sure she isn't drifting alkaline. Between 6 and 7, P binds to oxygen. Above 7 it starts to bond to iron instead.
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