Showing posts with label gardening: disease. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gardening: disease. Show all posts
Tuesday, May 19, 2015
Sunday, May 17, 2015
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Nopest strips emit a powerful vapor that should only be used if you are not breathing the air they are in. Floramite is also very strong with harsh chemicals and should only be used as a last resort. It is expensive but effective. Bleach solution one tablespoon per on gallon of 95 F pH balanced water in mister should be used on plant and surrounding grow area. You can also use alcohol with 30% water or more.
rabbits
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Root rot is a condition more common on indoor plants with improper drainage and hydroponic systems caused by low oxygen mostly caused by temperature since low temperatures lower dissolved oxygen while high temperatures cause low levels, so keep temperature between 65-72F. This is often caused by Pythiaceae water mould including the genus pythium which was once classified as a fungus since if responds to many treatments similarly. It is part of the parasitic oomycete class that's considered microorganisms. This is typically reversible and can be prevented easily by creating an environment is simply can not survive in. This includes not letting your roots ever just sit in water.
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or grey mold is common and causes blights such as botrytis cinerea. This is a large problem for cannabis and also grapes, strawberries and peonies, but in references to cannabis it is usually called bud rot. Keep your plants warm, well ventilated and generally dry. Remove infected bud immediately. Usually bigger, dense buds are sadly more likely to get infected, but a rainy day can cause patches all over the plant. Darking,discoloration and drying are signs of infection. Deadened spots will stand out, but white mold is the first sign you can see and should be treated immediately to save yourself a lot of heart ache. Look for white and fluffy buds, grey, brown, or purple buds and speckled, dusty buds. It starts as a fluffy white growth in the middle of your buds, making it hard to catch early unless you see some on the sides. This quickly becomes grey or brown, burrowing deep in the bud. The fungus spore is usually carried through wind or dirty rain water, so it is pretty hard to get on indoor plants unless you have brought outside, inside somehow. Keep air moving too so that spores never get a chance to settle and grow. Dormant spores are able to survive for a long time. Your plant also needs a wound of some sort for the fungus to get in, like from a caterpillar, training the plant, white powdery mildew and such forth, so an unwounded plant has no risk. 60-70 F is a problem temperature as well as high humidity or weather causing your plant to be wet for a long time. Your colas that are super dense stay moist inside throughout, so are big problem areas. Removing infected buds is the only way to prevent the spread since there really isn't a way yo reverse the effects, only halt them.
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