It is in the ground I transplanted it outside 14 days ago. I used organic soil which worked great every time for me. Could be the heat stress because it was hot for the hole month there were a lot of heat waves it was 102°F two days ago but then the weather suddenly chanced now its 62°F and during the night its suddenly cold and it is on a bit of altitude (around 700m) so the weather changes quickly. But the rest of the plants are fine just this one looks sick..
No worries man, we are all on the same team 😎
It doesn't look too bad actually, it could be a bit stressed from the weather - since it was newly transplanted, that might have stressed her a bit. I don't see any signs of a pest infestation on the leaves, so that also makes me think it is stress.
The younger plants don't like the hot to cold so much, but if you are running the same genetics and this is the only one like it; it could very well be a 'runt' pheno. Doesn't mean it's a bad thing, it could still end up being a nice plant.
I recommend hitting these guys up: https://sierranaturalscience.com/
All certified organic stuff, I have used their natural pesticides and nutrients for my tomato farm operation. I suggest taking a look, they've got some great mite and pest control stuff & it's free samples!
I would also maybe try a kelp tea to try get some micro-nutes and amino acids in there. Should be good to go, but keep an eye on the undersides of the leaves. Any webbing or black spots (bug shit), holes in the leaves - that is time to bust out that Neem oil.
Recently had much worse mite damage indoor & bubbled a fresh aloe, fresh nettle,tiny bit of neem cake & a couple small drops of tea tree dr bronners. Plants loved it, added beneficial mites to clean up & looks controlled now. & no more than twice a week for foliar, go very light on neem in general, protect the flavor!
I wouldn't spray anything on a plant 2-3 times per day for any reason. Neem Oil is awesome, but there is no need to apply more than 1 time per week.
Have you checked the underside of the leaves? Happen to have a shot of that?
The more info you can share, the better chances of finding help. Is it in soil? Ground or pot? Weather? Plant looks stressed, let's find out why
It is in the ground I transplanted it outside 14 days ago. I used organic soil which worked great every time for me. Could be the heat stress because it was hot for the hole month there were a lot of heat waves it was 102°F two days ago but then the weather suddenly chanced now its 62°F and during the night its suddenly cold and it is on a bit of altitude (around 700m) so the weather changes quickly. But the rest of the plants are fine just this one looks sick..
And thanks a lot for neem oil advice.
No worries man, we are all on the same team 😎
It doesn't look too bad actually, it could be a bit stressed from the weather - since it was newly transplanted, that might have stressed her a bit. I don't see any signs of a pest infestation on the leaves, so that also makes me think it is stress.
The younger plants don't like the hot to cold so much, but if you are running the same genetics and this is the only one like it; it could very well be a 'runt' pheno. Doesn't mean it's a bad thing, it could still end up being a nice plant.
I recommend hitting these guys up:
https://sierranaturalscience.com/
All certified organic stuff, I have used their natural pesticides and nutrients for my tomato farm operation. I suggest taking a look, they've got some great mite and pest control stuff & it's free samples!
I would also maybe try a kelp tea to try get some micro-nutes and amino acids in there. Should be good to go, but keep an eye on the undersides of the leaves. Any webbing or black spots (bug shit), holes in the leaves - that is time to bust out that Neem oil.
Happy GROWIN'
Thanks man! It already looks a lot better :)
And thanks for the link, great store!
No worries, bud! Glad to hear that - that is the goal! Grow more, know more. 😎 Happy harvesting 🔥🚀
U would need a microscope do diagnose the tiny mites
It wants to move to Colorado to be with the big boy plants
You don't need to be in Colorado to grow..it's up to you :)
Not sure but I wish you the very best. Doesn't look so bad though.
Recently had much worse mite damage indoor & bubbled a fresh aloe, fresh nettle,tiny bit of neem cake & a couple small drops of tea tree dr bronners. Plants loved it, added beneficial mites to clean up & looks controlled now. & no more than twice a week for foliar, go very light on neem in general, protect the flavor!
Thank you for this advice. I will try it out.
Haven’t had any problems since one foliar application & releasing some beneficial mites. She is happy now https://steemit-production-imageproxy-upload.s3.amazonaws.com/DQmP7Av4AK4YPfvLuYC5v5MaToNCUkDXWFBwWMAVWNqMmH6
Beautiful! And nice branching too!