I wanted to ask anyone from the OG community if they know what, or why this cannabis plant is dying.
This is an AK-48 and all the leaves have wilted, and/or laying down.
There is an AK-48 right next to it that is fine and “flourishing”. We also have AK-48’s in the hoophouse which are doing fine.
The loss of this plant is mimimal and not anything the owner is concerned with but I am interested, thus I ask if anyone might know.
Thanks,
Argyle`
Thanks all, and some folks asked for more detail, so here you ho! This farm is in a legal state in New England and the soil is Conneticut river bottom land. The area has been getting rained on pretty hard, and last night got “pounded” by rain. Today this plant presented. Some folks, like my friend would stop here, marking too much rain as the reason and move on.
What prompted me to ask is why only one plant,(anomaly).and all the leaves look to me as the sun side of all the leaves “flipped”, and why one plant out of many?And to me, this appears
`The fertilizer regime each is always whatever organic dry amendment is is applied “under” recommended dosage, and applied and measured “by the handful”.
Thanks for your guidance, I edited and inserted the picture at the end of my query, much obliged for your help and if you could let me know if this post is correct now.
Thank You,
Argyle
This looks like under-watering or excessively high temperatures. I would expect to see more sign of foliage issues if it was a pH issue issue or related to nutrients. Though, that is just my guess without more information.
Witting usually comes by dryness, heat or underwatering, but if the plant near is fine then could be something on the roots , I would just give her plenty of water to discard first issues …
But def. feel the soil under it first.
IF the soil is not draining and the roots are sitting in wet mud basically, and suffocating, it might have this same effect on the plant. As under-watering.
But everyone else is likely correct in it looking like it’s VERY thirsty. And could use some shade during midday heat.
And if it is not wet in the root zone, one solution is to add a mulch, which will also keep the soil a more consistent temperature during diurnal shift.
That was my thought right off with it just being one plant. I’m guessing some critter chewed thru the tap root. Give that gal a light tug and you’ll know real quick.