header image
Home
Store Directory
Manufacturers
In the News!
Advanced Search
FAQs
News Feeds
Contact Us
Our Environment
Friends
Hydro for Hunger
Hydro TV!
Christmas tree
Other Resources
Site of the Week
Videos
Home arrow FAQs arrow Pests and Diseases arrow Most Common Problems?
Most Common Problems? PDF Print E-mail

These are the most common problems people encounter growing hydroponically:

Yellowing bottom leaves/older growth

The Nitrogen story:

Nitrogen is a transferable element (this means the plant can move it around as needed). If a plant is not receiving enough Nitrogen from the roots then it will rob Nitrogen from the older growth. In Hydroponics, usually the pH is too high and has locked out the available Nitrogen. Always check the pH before increasing nutrient level.

Save the plant: Leach! Check the pH, and adjust if necessary to 5.8 - 6.3. Check and maintain nutrient level. You may foliar feed (spray) with a pinch of CaNO3 (Calcium Nitrate) in a Litre of pH balanced water for quick results.

Leaf tips curl up

This is usually a Magnesium deficiency caused by a too low pH level.

Save the plant: Leach, check and adjust the pH level. You also may foliar feed (spray) with a pinch of MgSO4 (Magnesium Sulphate) in a Litre of pH balanced water for quick results.

Leaf tips curl under / leaf tip burn (browning)

The Nutrient level is too high.

Save the plant: Leach and decrease the nutrient level.

Leaching

Leaching should be done at every reservoir change and before countering any problem. This will rid the medium and root zone of toxic salt build up.

To leach, rinse the root zone with straight pH balanced water.

Use twice as much liquid as the hydroponic container would have held when empty.

Homegrown Hydroponics Inc. - http://www.hydroponics.com

Newsflash

Scientists and growers are looking for new ways to protect citrus from the latest natural threat -- greening.

BY PHIL LONG


FORT PIERCE -- Hurricanes wiped out a quarter of his 100 acres of groves in 2004, and the citrus canker eradication program felled 50 more acres, but Pete Spyke is mounting a cutting-edge comeback in a small experimental grove called ``Rock Bottom.''

Just off Okeechobee Road a few miles west of Florida's Turnpike, Spyke has planted 1,496 tangelo and grapefruit trees on nearly six acres. Some of the year-old trees now stand four to six feet tall.
 

Read more...
Google
Web hydromall.com/web