Tutankhamon & Pineapple Chunk Outdoors In Massachusetts

This morning I'm seeing this on a small percentage of the tut. As I can look at pics to ID it, looks like calcium def. from my inexperienced house. Anyone have an opinion? Unless coached otherwise I'm going to give her a dose of cal mag with the rest of her feedings. I think her home is getting small.
IMG_3724.jpg
IMG_3727.jpg
 
This is it for sure. The pest solver is a link in my fav's now. Is it ok to foliar feed with dolomite lime at this stage of flower? Or do you have a suggestion?

Solution to fixing a Calcium deficiency
To fix a calcium deficiency you can treat by foliar feeding with one teaspoon of dolomite lime or Garden lime per quart of water, Or Any Chemical/Organic nutrients that have Calcium in them will fix a Calcium deficiency. (Only mixing at ½ strength when using chemical nutrients or it will cause nutrient burn!)
Or you can take crushed up dolomite lime or garden lime in a gallon of water and water it in the soil. 1 to 2 teaspoons per gallon of water, which will be slow acting. Garden Gypsum, which is medium absorption. Limestone, which is medium absorption, Rock Phosphate and Animal wastes which are both medium/slow absorption. Note: Caution when using gypsum to an already acid soil (pH that is less than 5.5) can have a very bad effect on different types of plants by effecting the absorption of soil aluminum, which is poison to plant roots.

Now if you added to much chemical nutrients and or organics, (which is hard to burn your plants when using organics) you need to flush the soil with plain water. You need to use 2 times as much water as the size of the pot, for example: If you have a 5 gallon pot and need to flush it, you need to use 10 gallons of water to rinse out the soil good enough to get rid of excessive nutrients.

Pictures 1-2 shows calcium deficiencies. First one shows late, 2nd one shows early development.

1134calcium-11.jpg


11341134calcium-start2.jpg
 
Back
Top Bottom