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Hi Everyone,
Thank you for replying. They are under t5 flourscent 120HVAC 60watts light. I have about four of them on top of the growbed. The room temperature is 19C as they are in the basement of my house. Outside temperature (-10c).
PH: 7
Ammonia: 0.5
Nitrite: 0.8
Nitrate: 20ppm
While your temperature is still a bit low, I want to think that you could have the same issues as I have seen. I have a youngish (1 year) micro system that has 5 cherry tomatoes in it among others. It was doing well up to a point in terms of nutrients, but the tomatoes take terrible strain when the nitrogen (and I suppose other micro and macro nutrients) start running low. Them and secondly the cucumbers in my system showed yellowing of leaves while the other plants just slowed down, but still looked good. I have read many times that people advised putting tomatoes into a system at a later stage as it needs to build up sufficient nutrients first. Not sure when they SHOULD go in, but for me, they are the first to complain! If you look at my photos you will see the lay-out. Everything still looks pretty much the same apart from the tomatoes that look like they are being starved - hardly a leaf left, all yellow and dying off.
Kobus Jooste said:While your temperature is still a bit low, I want to think that you could have the same issues as I have seen. I have a youngish (1 year) micro system that has 5 cherry tomatoes in it among others. It was doing well up to a point in terms of nutrients, but the tomatoes take terrible strain when the nitrogen (and I suppose other micro and macro nutrients) start running low. Them and secondly the cucumbers in my system showed yellowing of leaves while the other plants just slowed down, but still looked good. I have read many times that people advised putting tomatoes into a system at a later stage as it needs to build up sufficient nutrients first. Not sure when they SHOULD go in, but for me, they are the first to complain! If you look at my photos you will see the lay-out. Everything still looks pretty much the same apart from the tomatoes that look like they are being starved - hardly a leaf left, all yellow and dying off.
Hi Kobus,
I think my problem is same as yours. How did you manage to grow them in the end. was it just time or you did something else. Thanks
I use a South African product, which would not help explaining in detail here other than I have dropped enough of it to turn my water quite tea coloured. My system is already a year old, thus not as "young as others, but I still managed to drop Nitrates from 30 mg/L to 1.5 in a matter of weeks. Three cucumbers, 12 strawberries, 5 tomatoes, 3 corns, 2 kale, 2 butternut, a pile of spring onion and water cress, cut flowers, spinach, parsley, lettuce................................................
TCLynx said:I tend to put a heaping table spoon of chelated iron powder in each of my grow beds each month (my pH is high and my well water deficient in Iron) I also sometimes put about a quart of Maxicrop original into my big system, just a splash in each grow bed where the water enters. That is enough Maxicrop to turn my water brown for a few days. The Iron tends to turn the water orange and my system water is usually a nice yellow color.
I think the appropriate nutrient dose of individual plants has been a "Grey Area" in the AP information available so far.This is an important area since backyard'ers will naturally tend to place huge demand from their budding systems by virtue of planting a variety of plants early on. If we know the individual needs of each plant we might be able to at least foliar spray on an individual basis. So far I've found very limited info on this subject.
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