I water about once a week from the bottom. The medium sucks- was initially coir, then put the pod in a cup of soil, but that was garden soil, not potting. Mixed in the soil is some bone meal and sulphur. Hesitating to water more since the soil is so dense—when I'm ready to up-pot, I plan to mix in manure and sand/perlite.Blister said:How often do you water and what are you growing in?
Too much or too little? There's sulphur in the soil.queequeg152 said:youve also got some bad interveiinal chlorsis probably magnesium or sulfur or both...
Could be a sun scald, recently moved outside, and the harden-off had to be sped because I can't really do much while at work (other than put them in an area that gets less light in the afternoon).CAPCOM said:Top pic also looks like posible sun scald on bottom most leaf.
Are you feeding? Malnutrition is also indicative.
Are you growing in coir?
Coir is not some vile entity. No need to release the rootball. Potting up in a fertile substrate is a good suggestion, though.Get some 1 gal pots, some GOOD growers mix, a small bag of mykos, get them repoted and soon. Spend a little time on here sourcing a good fertilizer and get them on a regular feeding schedule.
Lose the Coir and garden dirt when you repot, can be done by allowing root ball to release during immersion in a bucket of water.
I would never recommend coir (especially 100%coir) to anyone. And I am assuming garden dirt as described is choking of root access to any nuts that may be added in the near future.solid7 said:Coir is not some vile entity. No need to release the rootball. Potting up in a fertile substrate is a good suggestion, though.
Based on what, exactly?I would never recommend coir (especially 100%coir) to anyone. And I am assuming garden dirt as described is choking of root access to any nuts that may be added in the near future.
Yep you need to decide on which way to go in terms of growing medium. I've had success with coir, but you have to treat it differently than soil - hydro nutes and feed with every watering. If you go with soil make sure it's a good potting soil.Fitsea said:I water about once a week from the bottom. The medium sucks- was initially coir, then put the pod in a cup of soil, but that was garden soil, not potting. Mixed in the soil is some bone meal and sulphur. Hesitating to water more since the soil is so densewhen I'm ready to up-pot, I plan to mix in manure and sand/perlite.
imo you dont really have the time for an organic solution to this... do you have any hydroponic fertilizers? bottled or otherwise?Fitsea said:I water about once a week from the bottom. The medium sucks- was initially coir, then put the pod in a cup of soil, but that was garden soil, not potting. Mixed in the soil is some bone meal and sulphur. Hesitating to water more since the soil is so dense—when I'm ready to up-pot, I plan to mix in manure and sand/perlite.
Too much or too little? There's sulphur in the soil.
Could be a sun scald, recently moved outside, and the harden-off had to be sped because I can't really do much while at work (other than put them in an area that gets less light in the afternoon).
Bonemeal and sulphur in soil. Seedlings were in coir, and I just plopped the pods in a cup of garden (not potting) soil. When ready to up-pot, I'll doctor garden soil with perlite or sand and manure.
No, this is ABSOLUTELY false!!!I've had success with coir, but you have to treat it differently than soil - hydro nutes and feed with every watering.
I'm a little confused as to your post stating what I wrote being "ABSOLUTELY false!!!" I stated that you need to feed with every watering. You then go on to say that "the only difference being is how you feed it".solid7 said:No, this is ABSOLUTELY false!!!You can use coco exactly the same as you would peat. The only difference being how you feed it, if you use synthetic nutes. For organics, there is no difference. You can put any organic fertilizer in it, and it works beautifully.I have a year round growing season, and I greatly prefer coco over peat, because it doesn't shrink/collapse like peat, therefore it holds structure. And it doesn't break down as fast as peat, which means that I can use it longer before repotting. Therefore, I won't hear of anyone saying that it doesn't work, will do something bad, cause the sky to fall, etc. Some of the things being said with regard to coco are complete bullshit!Help the guy get his peppers recovered in the fastest, simplest, most straightforward way. That's easy, and already been said - up pot into a good mix, get the feeding/watering sorted, and be done. Stop overthinking! LOL
Âsolid7 said:No, this is ABSOLUTELY false!!!
You can use coco exactly the same as you would peat. The only difference being how you feed it, if you use synthetic nutes. For organics, there is no difference. You can put any organic fertilizer in it, and it works beautifully.
I have a year round growing season, and I greatly prefer coco over peat, because it doesn't shrink/collapse like peat, therefore it holds structure. And it doesn't break down as fast as peat, which means that I can use it longer before repotting. Therefore, I won't hear of anyone saying that it doesn't work, will do something bad, cause the sky to fall, etc. Some of the things being said with regard to coco are complete bullshit!
Help the guy get his peppers recovered in the fastest, simplest, most straightforward way. That's easy, and already been said - up pot into a good mix, get the feeding/watering sorted, and be done. Stop overthinking! LOL
Âjuanitos said:i  mean they look rough but not that bad. i would provide some sort of nutrients with your next watering. even if its just miracle grow blue stuff.
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as long as your cups have some holes in the bottom and you are letting them drain you shouldn't worry too much about overwatering.
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to anyone hating on coco go view blisters glog. the roots are sexy
I'm not talking about drying out, but rather breaking down organically. (it turns to mush) This causes even well watered peat to compact in a container. Whereas one needs to add things to peat to help maintain the overall structure of the substrate - in addition to providing other qualities - often one only needs to add things to coco to facilitate better drainage - and that's not even necessary, much of the time. And the roots that one gets from coco are second to none. Bad if you want fruits quickly, but quite desirable if you have an extended growing season. (increased disease resistance)peat shrinks badly becauce you dont have a surfactant load to keep it hydrophillic.
Don't tell my plants that. Cause dumbshit me has been planting them from seeds in straight coco (or coco/vermiculite) with no hydroponic nutes or treatment, for quite some time. I rather like Dr. Earth Tomato ferts, with a worm casting top dress after first true leaves, and every watering with a weak solution of fish emulsion and seaweed.you really need to treat coco like a hydroponic medium.
Because he said you NEED to treat it like hydro, and you NEED to feed with every watering. And that's just not true. Not a bad idea, but like I've said in separate posts, you can drop slow release ferts in coco, and it works. Straight, built up, or amended with anything else you like.think hes saying you can amend coco to make a soilmix just like peat based mixes.
blister is talking about pure coco. solid is talking about building a soilmix with coco in it (replacing peat in traditional soilmixes)
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dunno why solid said he was absolutely false when blister is talking about his experience with coco.. how can his experience be false lol.
I said the difference in how you feed is if you use synthetic ferts. There is a difference in PH, and there is a difference in the macro nutrients required for each media. (Potassium content higher in coco) That's all that it meant then, and that's all that it means now.I'm a little confused as to your post stating what I wrote being "ABSOLUTELY false!!!" I stated that you need to feed with every watering. You then go on to say that "the only difference being is how you feed it".
Neil
Âsolid7 said:I'm not talking about drying out, but rather breaking down organically. (it turns to mush) This causes even well watered peat to compact in a container. Whereas one needs to add things to peat to help maintain the overall structure of the substrate - in addition to providing other qualities - often one only needs to add things to coco to facilitate better drainage - and that's not even necessary, much of the time. And the roots that one gets from coco are second to none. Bad if you want fruits quickly, but quite desirable if you have an extended growing season. (increased disease resistance)
Don't tell my plants that. Cause dumbshit me has been planting them from seeds in straight coco (or coco/vermiculite) with no hydroponic nutes or treatment, for quite some time. I rather like Dr. Earth Tomato ferts, with a worm casting top dress after first true leaves, and every watering with a weak solution of fish emulsion and seaweed.
I really wasn't even going there. But since you brought it up... I grew hydroponically for years. I have yet to ever see a grower successfully perform a full organic hydro grow in recirculated nutrient solution, without their reservoir (regularly) turning into a bucket of sludge. However, in the case of drain to waste, I've seen that done organically many times. But it's a hell of a lot of work - to a degree that can't be exaggerated. Every watering is some sort of magic solution, often not the same tonic twice in a row, etc, etc, etc. That's a great science experiment, but not much else.i think your mistake is in assuming you cannot use ORGANIC ferts in a hydroponic system, or that hydroponic is antithetical to "organic". it is not. hydroponic just refers to the plants getting their nutritional needs met by a solution or suspension of the minerals rather than a soil matrix.
That was my point, exactly. It's a fine line you walk when you get into certain types of media. There is black and white, and then there are shades of gray. Sub Irrigated containers are "technically" considered wick hydroponics. But it's confusing to tell a container grower to treat something as hydroponic - especially if they are leaning towards being noobish. It's understood if you've grown both ways. I believe it's much better to just treat the coco coir as a viable substrate in its own rite - because it very much is. It's versatile enough to be used for hydro.now... as to CRF's in a hydroponic medium... that probably cannot be called a hydroponic system if we are being pedantic here. i guess that should be better referred to as a "soilless culture" culture, but what ever. its a distinction i choose not to religiously adhere to.