What’s up guys
I’m having a issue as I just transplanted my plants in new 10 gallon pots from 2 gallons and placed them in new room to veg a lil and flower. I had only 3 1000w mh lights in room before and just put them under 12 1000w hps. Trees were nice dark green. When I transplanted I went a day without feeding instantly so idk if new room with all hps lights shocked the plants due to too much light and because they weren’t fed when transplanted. I wanted to hear your guys opinion so I know what steps to stop this from happening and prevent it the next time. All plants have good feeding and temps in room gets max 77-80 with humidity at 57.
Please let me know I’ll be posting images now.
There IS such thing as too much light my friend, but with the dark leaves make sure and check your pH In run off.
High light exposure may have put them in overdrive and nute lock out would exasperate things.
are those yellow spots kinda dry and crispy and mostly on the higher branches? it does look similar to damage i got from cranking my light too high, or when i foliar sprayed essential oils with the lights on, also the time i sprayed undiluted isopropyl alcohol when treating for bugs.
if you have dimmable ballasts maybe try lowering them and slowly hardening them off to the light
Yea it’s forsure the lights is there anything I can do without having to turn lights off to help speed the process? If you know
If you can, you could raise the lights the first week or so and slowly work them down to optimal range.
Lights don’t have dimmable ballasts and can’t be raised or lowered as they are mounted on roof already
what are you feeding them?
Really nice show you have there @DoubleMOrganics! Beautiful. Give them a couple days and keep an eye on them. Maybe try raising the humidity into the 60-70% range to ease the plants from having to evaporate excess moisture under the new lights(too much might increase stress). They should acclimate to the new environment fairly quickly. Looks like a little transplant shock to me. Had the same thing recently moving from area high in humidity to a dryer spot. Also, If you can get mosquito netting in a roll, you’d be able to drape it over the entire crop and diffuse some of the light intensity from the 1000w’ers. Remove it a few days later.
You’ve got @Viva_Mexico on your side. Pay attention and best of luck . Cheers