Before you add anything
A practical diagnostic guide for pH, EC, water, nutrients, root-zone oxygen and plant symptoms
Do not diagnose the leaf before you understand the system. Most plant problems do not begin with a missing bottle. They begin when part of the cultivation system moves out of balance: source water, alkalinity, pH, EC, runoff, root-zone oxygen, watering rhythm, light, temperature, humidity, nutrient interaction or plant phase.
This page helps you slow down before reacting.
Every time you water a cannabis plant, you are making more than one decision.
You are not only deciding how much water to give. You are deciding what enters the root zone: the quality of the water, its mineral load, the strength of the nutrient solution, the pH range, the balance between elements, and the conditions the roots must work inside.
Water, pH, EC, nutrients, oxygen, medium and environment are often treated as separate subjects. In practice, they form one system.
This article brings the full input picture together:
what goes into the water, what reaches the roots, what becomes available, what becomes locked out, and how the plant responds.
This is not a deficiency chart. This is a method.
But between those two questions sits a third one:
That question is where many cultivation problems begin.
A grower may follow a feeding chart correctly and still create stress if the source water is hard, the alkalinity is high, the pH drifts, the EC is too high, the medium is accumulating salts, the reservoir is low in oxygen, or the plant is not transpiring normally.
This article exists because water and nutrients cannot be understood separately once they enter a real grow.
The goal is not to guess faster. The goal is to diagnose cleaner.
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Before adding anything, know what you are starting with.
Unknown water creates unknown problems.
Tap water can be perfectly usable for cannabis cultivation, but it varies enormously from one location to another. It may contain:
The first number to check is baseline EC. If your tap water already reads 0.4–0.5 mS/cm or higher, that EC is not “free”. It already counts towards the total mineral load the plant receives.
A common issue with tap water is high bicarbonate content. Bicarbonates act as a buffer. They resist pH change and can push the solution back upwards after adjustment.
That is why some growers adjust pH correctly, check again later and find that the pH has drifted.
It is not always the meter. Sometimes it is the water resisting correction.
Letting tap water sit uncovered for 24 hours may reduce chlorine, but it does not reliably remove chloramines. If your water supplier uses chloramines, a carbon filter is usually more effective.
Reverse Osmosis water gives the grower a very clean starting point. Typical RO water has a very low EC:
0.0–0.05 mS/cm
This makes it easier to build the nutrient solution from scratch. You are not guessing what hidden minerals are already present.
The trade-off is that RO water is almost too clean. It contains little or no calcium and magnesium. Cannabis plants need both, especially in coco coir and hydroponics, where the medium provides little buffering. In RO-based feeding, calcium and magnesium usually need to be supplied through the nutrient programme or a Cal-Mag supplement.
Do not treat RO water as magically better. Treat it as more controllable.
Reverse Osmosis gives excellent control, but it is not always required. If source water EC is below 0.5 mS/cm, stable, low in sodium and chloride, and not causing pH drift or salt accumulation, it may be perfectly usable.
RO becomes more useful when:
RO also has disadvantages. It slows water flow, requires maintenance, wastes water as brine, and removes calcium and magnesium that must then be added back.
RO is not magic. It is a control tool.
| Water type | Typical EC | Typical pH behaviour | Notes |
| RO water | 0.0–0.05 mS/cm | Weakly buffered | Very clean; usually needs Ca/Mg support |
| Tap water | 0.1–0.8+ mS/cm | Varies widely | Test first; hard water may drift upward |
| Filtered water | 0.05–0.3 mS/cm | Usually more stable than tap | Depends on filter type |
| Rainwater | 0.0–0.1 mS/cm | Usually soft | Test for contamination before use |
The more unknowns in the water, the harder troubleshooting becomes later.
Read more here: Reverse Osmosis (RO) water, Water recycling and heavy metal testing, DIY water cleaning and filtration methods
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pH and alkalinity are related, but they are not the same thing.
pH tells you how acidic or alkaline the water is at the moment you measure it.
Alkalinity tells you how strongly the water resists pH change.
Most irrigation alkalinity comes from carbonates and bicarbonates. These behave like dissolved limestone in the water. They react with acids and buffer the solution, making pH harder to move and harder to keep stable.
This is why two water sources with the same pH can behave very differently. One may adjust easily and stay stable.
The other may drift upward again and again after pH correction.
In container cultivation, alkalinity often matters more than starting water pH because it can slowly push the substrate pH upward over time.
Do not confuse high pH with high alkalinity.
A water source can have high pH but low alkalinity. A water source can have moderate pH but enough alkalinity to cause long-term substrate problems.
For growers, the practical lesson is simple:
If pH keeps drifting upward, do not only blame the pH meter.
Check the alkalinity of the water.
Water hardness usually refers to dissolved calcium, magnesium and other cations.
Alkalinity refers mainly to carbonates and bicarbonates and the water’s ability to neutralise acids. The confusion happens because both may be reported as calcium carbonate equivalents.
But they do not mean the same thing. Hard water may contain useful calcium and magnesium. High-alkalinity water may push substrate pH upward over time. For cultivation, individual elements matter more than the word “hard”.
A water report that shows calcium, magnesium, sodium, bicarbonates, chloride, alkalinity and EC is far more useful than a simple “hard water” label.
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Source water EC tells you how much dissolved mineral content is already present before nutrients are added. This matters because source water EC counts toward the total EC the plant receives.
| Source water EC | Interpretation | Practical action |
| Below 0.5 mS/cm | Low dissolved salts | Usually usable without treatment |
| 0.5–1.0 mS/cm | Moderate dissolved salts | Watch for salt build-up; consider filtration, blending or more runoff |
| Above 1.0 mS/cm | High dissolved salts | Treatment, blending or RO is strongly recommended |
A high source water EC leaves less room for fertiliser. If the water already starts at 0.8 mS/cm, a nutrient solution mixed to 1.8 mS/cm is not the same as one built from RO water. Part of that EC comes from unknown minerals, not from the nutrient programme.
This is why source water testing comes before feeding strategy.
Water may contain elements that are useful at low levels and problematic at higher levels.
| Element | Why it matters | |
| Sodium | Na | Raises EC and can contribute to salt stress |
| Chloride | Cl− | Essential in tiny amounts, but toxic at higher levels |
| Boron | B | Needed in very small amounts; excess can cause tip burn and toxicity |
| Iron | Fe | Can precipitate, stain surfaces and clog irrigation systems |
| Manganese | Mn | Can precipitate or support clogging bacteria |
| Fluoride | F− | May be present in drinking water and can be phytotoxic in sensitive systems |
| Calcium / Magnesium | Ca, Mg | Useful nutrients, but high levels may affect balance or cause scaling |
A simple EC meter cannot tell you which elements are present. It only tells you the total dissolved load. If source water EC is high, or if problems keep returning without a clear cause, a complete water analysis is the only way to know what the water actually contains.
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pH does not feed the plant. It controls whether the plant can access what you feed.
Nutrients may be present in the solution, but if the pH is outside the useful range for the medium, some elements become harder for the roots to absorb.
This is nutrient lockout: the food is present, but the plant cannot use it properly.
A plant can be hungry in a medium full of nutrients!
| Medium | Practical input pH range |
| Soil | 6.0–6.5 |
| Coco coir | 5.7–6.2 |
| Hydroponics | 5.5–6.0 |
These are working ranges, not single perfect numbers.
Do not chase one exact pH every time. Keep the input inside the correct range and watch the plant.
The target pH range does not radically change from phase to phase. What changes is how sensitive the plant becomes to mistakes.
Nutrients change the pH of water. The correct order is:
Do not adjust plain water first and then add nutrients.
You will almost certainly need to adjust again.
Never mix pH up and pH down solutions directly in their concentrated forms. The chemical reaction can generate intense heat & dangerous fumes, posing a severe safety risk.
Always handle these chemicals with care, using separate, colour-coded pipettes or tools for each solution to prevent cross-contamination.
Adjust pH by adding small amounts of each solution to water separately, testing regularly to achieve the desired range.
A repeated difference of more than about 0.5 pH units between input and runoff is worth investigating.
| Runoff pattern | Possible meaning |
| Runoff pH much lower than input | Medium may be acidifying; common in coco under heavy feeding |
| Runoff pH much higher than input | Medium may be alkalising; often linked to hard water, bicarbonates or excess calcium |
| Runoff close to input | Root zone is likely more stable |
Do not try to correct every runoff reading immediately.
Runoff is a diagnostic tool, not a number to worship. Look for patterns.
See more here: Watering, The role of runoff
Watering rhythm, runoff and moisture targets by phase and growing medium.
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EC means Electrical Conductivity. In cultivation, EC tells you how much dissolved mineral content is in the solution. It does not tell you which nutrients are present. It only tells you how concentrated the solution is overall.
EC is not a feeding philosophy. It is a strength reading.
Some meters show EC. Others show TDS or ppm.
If you use ppm, always know which scale your meter uses and stay consistent.
See more here: Understanding ppm and EC
The ranges below are designed as safe, practical targets for general cannabis cultivation. They are intentionally conservative.
Some experienced growers, especially in controlled hydroponic systems or high-performance coco grows, may push EC higher. That does not make higher numbers automatically better.
The plant, the medium, the environment and the root system
decide what is appropriate.
| Soil | Coco Coir | Hydroponics | ||||
| Phase | pH | EC | pH | EC | pH | EC |
| Germination | 5.7–6.0 | 0.3–0.6 | 5.5-6.0 | 0.3–0.6 | 5.5–6.0 | 0.3–0.6 |
| Minimal nutrients; stable pH & light feed. | ||||||
| Seedling | 6.0–6.5 | 0.6–0.8 | 5.7–6.2 | 0.8–1.0 | 5.5–6.0 | 0.9–1.2 |
| Sensitive to strong feeds; gentle balance. | ||||||
| Early Vegetation | 6.0–6.5 | 0.8–1.0 | 5.7–6.2 | 1.0–1.2 | 5.5–6.0 | 1.2–1.4 |
| Increased nitrogen uptake; leaf and root growth. | ||||||
| Main Vegetation | 6.0–6.5 | 1.0–1.4 | 5.7–6.2 | 1.2–1.6 | 5.5–6.0 | 1.4–1.8 |
| Nitrogen-dominant feeding for vigourous growth. | ||||||
| Late Vegetation | 6.0–6.5 | 1.4–1.6 | 5.7–6.2 | 1.6–1.8 | 5.5–6.0 | 1.8–2.0 |
| Balanced feeding; plant prepares for flowering. | ||||||
| Pre-Flowering | 6.0–6.5 | 1.6–1.8 | 5.7–6.2 | 1.8–2.0 | 5.5–6.0 | 2.0–2.2 |
| Higher phosphorus & potassium requirements. | ||||||
| Blooming | 6.0–6.5 | 1.8–2.2 | 5.7–6.2 | 2.0–2.4 | 5.5–6.0 | 2.2–2.6 |
| Peak phosphorus and potassium demand. | ||||||
| Ripening | 6.0–6.5 | 0.8–1.0 | 5.7–6.2 | 1.0–1.2 | 5.5–6.0 | 1.2–1.4 |
| Minimal nutrients; preparation for final flush. | ||||||
| Flushing | 6.0–6.5 | 0.0–0.4 | 5.7–6.2 | 0.0–0.4 | 5.5–6.0 | 0.0–0.4 |
| Flush salts and enhance flavour. | ||||||
Advanced growers may exceed these ranges, especially in hydroponics. That should only be done with strong light, stable VPD, healthy roots, reliable instruments and close plant observation.
For most growers, safer numbers produce fewer problems.
Runoff EC is one of the most useful tools for understanding what is happening in the root zone.
| Runoff EC compared to input | What it may suggest |
| Much higher than input | Salt accumulation in the medium |
| Close to input | Medium is reasonably balanced |
| Much lower than input | Medium may be depleted, or irrigation pattern may be inconsistent |
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Water carries nutrients into the root zone. But the nutrient balance must match the plant’s phase, medium, environment and root health.
A seedling does not need the same input as a plant in full bloom. A plant under weak light cannot use the same feed strength as a plant under intense light. A stressed root system cannot handle what a healthy root system can.
Nutrient management is not just “more” or “less”. It is timing, balance and context.
| Nitrogen | N | Nitrogen supports green growth: leaves, stems and general structure. |
| It is most important during vegetative development. | ||
| Too little nitrogen causes pale growth and weak structure. Too much nitrogen, especially during flowering, can create dark, lush plants with soft growth, delayed flowering response and poorer final quality. | ||
| Nitrogen is useful. Excess nitrogen is not strength. | ||
| Phosphorus | P | Phosphorus supports root development, energy transfer and flower formation. |
| The common mistake is assuming that high phosphorus early will automatically create better flowers later. It does not work that simply. | ||
| During vegetation, cannabis usually does not need excessive phosphorus. Too much too early can disturb balance and does not replace good root development, light, environment or timing. | ||
| Phosphorus becomes more important as the plant transitions into flowering and begins building reproductive structure. | ||
| Potassium | K | Potassium helps regulate water movement, enzyme activity, stress response and overall plant resilience. |
| It remains important throughout the cycle and becomes especially relevant during flowering, when the plant is moving large amounts of water and building dense floral tissue. | ||
| Potassium is not only a “bloom nutrient”. It is part of the plant’s entire water and energy system. |
Calcium (Ca) and Magnesium (Mg) are often discussed separately because they are common problem areas in cannabis cultivation, especially in coco and hydroponics.
| Element | Why it matters | |
| Calcium | Ca | Cell structure, new growth, root and shoot development |
| Magnesium | Mg | Chlorophyll production and photosynthesis |
| Sulfur | S | Proteins, root growth and plant metabolism |
| Iron | Fe | New growth and chlorophyll formation |
| Zinc | Zn | Growth regulation and enzyme function |
| Manganese | Mn | Photosynthesis and metabolic processes |
| Boron | B | Cell wall formation and growing points |
| Copper | Cu | Enzyme activity and plant metabolism |
| Molybdenum | Mo | Nitrogen metabolism |
| Silicon | Si | Not always considered essential, but useful for structure and stress resistance |
Micronutrients are required in tiny amounts, but “tiny” does not mean optional.
When pH is wrong, micronutrient problems can appear even when the nutrients are present.
See more here: Nutrient management and fertiliser use
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Not all fertilisers behave the same way.
This matters because the grower’s control changes with the fertiliser type.
| Fertiliser type | Main advantage | Main caution |
| Mineral liquid nutrients | Fast, predictable, easy to measure | Easy to overfeed if EC is ignored |
| Dry soluble salts | Efficient and economical | Require accurate weighing and compatibility knowledge |
| Organic liquid feeds | Useful in biological systems | Can ferment, clog or reduce oxygen in reservoirs |
| Slow / controlled release | Less frequent feeding | Hard to remove once overapplied |
| Compost / amendments | Supports soil biology | Variable strength; can be too rich or water-retentive |
The three large numbers on a fertiliser label show N-P-K. They do not tell the whole story. A complete label may also show:
N-P-K tells you the direction of the formula. It does not tell you whether the programme is complete, balanced, suitable for your medium, or safe at the dose you are using.
Use labels as information. Do not use them as commands.
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Many hydroponic nutrient lines separate products into two or three parts because some concentrated nutrients are incompatible with each other.
A common problem is calcium reacting with phosphates or sulfates. When incompatible nutrients are mixed together in concentrated form, they can form insoluble precipitates.
The nutrient may still be in the tank, but no longer available to the plant.
Signs of precipitation include:
This is why the safest rule is: Never mix concentrates together.
Always add each product separately to water and mix well before adding the next.
Add nutrients in a specific order to prevent chemical precipitation and ensure proper mixing:
| 1. | Water | → | |
| → | 2. | Silica, if used | → |
| → | 3. | Base nutrient Part A | → |
| → | 4. | Base nutrient Part B | → |
| → | 5. | Cal-Mag or micronutrients, if required | → |
| → | 6. | Bloom boosters or additives | → |
| → | 7. | Measure EC | → |
| → | 8. | Adjust pH last |
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Nutrients do not work alone. Inside the root zone, elements interact. Some support each other. Others compete. Too much of one element can reduce the availability of another, even when both are present in the solution.
This is the basic idea behind nutrient interaction charts such as Mulder’s Chart. For the grower, the lesson is simple:
Excess can create deficiency
A plant can show a deficiency symptom not because the missing element is absent, but because something else is blocking its uptake.
| Excess or imbalance | Possible effect |
| Too much potassium | May reduce calcium and magnesium uptake |
| Too much calcium | May interfere with magnesium, potassium or micronutrient balance |
| Too much phosphorus | May reduce zinc, iron and micronutrient availability |
| Too much nitrogen | May delay flowering response and mask other imbalances |
| High bicarbonates | May push pH upward and reduce nutrient availability |
| Salt build-up | May create lockout even when nutrients are present |
Do not use this table as a final diagnosis. Use it as a warning against the most common mistake in cultivation: adding more before understanding what is already there.
When a plant shows deficiency symptoms, the first question is not always:
What is missing?
Often, the better question is:
What is preventing the plant from using what is already available?
| Antagonistic | Nutrient | Synergistic |
| K | N | S, Mg, Mo |
| Fe, Ca, Zn, Cu, K | P | Mg |
| Ca, Mg, B, N, P | K | Fe, Mn |
| Mg, Zn, Fe, Mn, B, P, K, S | Ca | None |
| K, Ca | Mg | N, P |
| Ca, Cu, Mo | S | Mn, N |
| Cu, Mn, P, Ca, Zn | Fe | K |
| Fe, P, Ca | Zn | None |
| Mn, N, P, S, Fe | Cu | Mo |
| Ca, Fe, Cu | Mn | K, S |
| N, K, Ca | B | None |
| S | Mo | N, Cu |
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Roots need oxygen. This is one of the most overlooked parts of irrigation. A cannabis plant can wilt not because it lacks water, but because the root zone has too much water and not enough oxygen.
Oxygen moves much faster through air than through water. When the pores of the medium remain filled with water for too long, oxygen diffusion slows dramatically. The roots begin to suffer, nutrient uptake drops, and the plant may close its stomata to reduce water loss.
To the grower, this can look like underwatering. The wrong response is to water again. In reality, the root zone may need air, not more water.
Healthy irrigation is not only about water supply.
It is also about oxygen replacement.
In hydroponic systems, roots depend heavily on dissolved oxygen in the nutrient solution. As water temperature rises, water holds less oxygen.
A practical root-zone temperature target for oxygenated hydroponic solutions is around: 20–22°C
For most systems, the goal is not extreme cold water. The goal is stable, oxygen-rich water.
Signs of low oxygen in the root zone may include:
In container grows, oxygen comes mainly from air spaces in the medium. In hydroponics, oxygen comes mainly from water movement, aeration and dissolved oxygen.
To improve oxygen around the roots:
In hydroponics, air stones, water movement, cascades, venturi systems and circulation pumps can help increase oxygen availability.
In soil and soilless media, the best oxygen tool is often correct irrigation rhythm.
The grower must learn the difference between a dry plant and a suffocated root zone.
See more here: Root system management
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Water can carry more than nutrients. It can also carry organic debris, algae, bacteria, biofilm, pathogens, residues and suspended particles that affect root health or clog irrigation systems. This matters especially in:
Biofilm is the slimy layer that can build up inside tanks, lines and emitters. It can reduce flow, protect unwanted microbes and make sanitation more difficult. The basic rule is:
Filter first. Sanitise later.
Sanitisers react with organic matter. If the water contains debris, roots, algae or residues, the treatment becomes less effective. For small growers, the most important habits are simple:
Sanitation is not about sterilising everything.
It is about reducing risk without harming the plant.
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Most feeding charts assume stable conditions.
Plants do not live in charts. They live in temperature, humidity, airflow, light intensity and root-zone conditions. These factors change how quickly water moves through the plant.
When transpiration is high, the plant pulls more water through its system. This usually happens under:
Under these conditions, nutrients can concentrate faster than expected. The plant may drink heavily, but that does not always mean it wants a stronger feed.
A practical response is to reduce nutrient strength by 10–20% during high-transpiration stress.
When transpiration is low, the plant drinks less. This can happen under:
In low-transpiration conditions, do not automatically increase feed strength. First correct the environment if possible.
Stronger nutrients do not fix a plant that is not moving water properly.
Environment and feeding are connected.
See more here: Vapour Pressure Deficit (VPD)
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Measuring the input solution is easy. Measuring the root zone is harder.
The goal is not to create laboratory precision at home.
The goal is to understand trends.
Runoff testing is the simplest method. You irrigate normally, collect the drainage and measure pH and EC.
More formal substrate testing methods exist.
These methods are useful because they estimate what is happening inside the medium rather than only measuring what goes in.
For most small growers, runoff trends are enough.
For repeated problems, commercial production, mother plants, or serious troubleshooting, substrate testing becomes much more valuable.
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Deficiency charts can be useful as visual references. But used alone, they are often misleading. The same leaf symptom may come from very different causes:
A brown spot does not automatically mean calcium deficiency.
A yellow leaf does not automatically mean nitrogen deficiency.
Burnt tips do not always mean simple overfeeding.
Pale new growth does not always mean iron is missing.
A damaged leaf is not a diagnosis. It is a signal.
Before adding anything, read the system:
This is where good growers separate observation from guessing.
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Leaves matter. They show stress, imbalance, hunger, excess, root problems and environmental mistakes. But leaves do not speak in single-word answers.
Leaf symptoms are clues, not verdicts. To understand them, you must read the symptom together with the growing conditions. Before deciding that a nutrient is missing, ask:
A leaf symptom without context is only half a sentence.
Where the symptom appears first matters because some nutrients can move inside the plant more easily than others.
| Usually more mobile | Often shows first on | |
| Nitrogen | N | Older lower leaves |
| Phosphorus | P | Older leaves |
| Potassium | K | Older leaves and margins |
| Magnesium | Mg | Older or middle leaves |
| Less mobile / slow moving | Often shows first on | |
| Calcium | Ca | New growth, tips, young tissues |
| Iron | Fe | New growth |
| Zinc | Zn | New growth |
| Manganese | Mn | New growth |
| Boron | B | Growing tips |
| Copper | Cu | Young leaves |
This does not diagnose the problem by itself.
It tells you where to look first.
Where the symptom appears matters.
| Symptom location | What it may suggest |
| Older lower leaves first | Mobile nutrient issue, underfeeding, natural ageing, root stress |
| New growth first | pH lockout, micronutrient issue, calcium issue, root-zone stress |
| Leaf tips across the plant | Excess feed, salt build-up, dry-back stress, high EC |
| Upper canopy only | Light stress, heat stress, VPD issue, calcium transport issue |
| Random spots across many leaves | pH instability, root stress, pest damage, foliar damage or salts |
This is not a diagnosis table.
It is a way to decide where to look first.
Yellowing leaves are one of the most common panic triggers. But yellowing can mean many things.
| Pattern | Possible causes |
| Lower leaves yellow slowly during late flowering | Normal ageing or nitrogen reduction |
| Lower leaves yellow early in vegetation | Underfeeding, root restriction, poor watering, low EC |
| Entire plant pale | Low feed strength, weak light, root stress, cold medium |
| New growth pale or yellow | pH issue, iron or micronutrient lockout, root-zone stress |
| Yellowing with burnt tips | Overfeeding or salt accumulation, not simple hunger |
Before increasing nutrients, check:
If runoff EC is already high, adding more nutrients may make the problem worse.
Slightly burnt leaf tips are common in cannabis cultivation. They usually mean the plant has reached the edge of its feeding comfort zone. This does not always require panic, but it should make the grower slow down and observe. Possible causes include:
Rust-coloured spots are often blamed on Calcium. Sometimes that is correct. Often it is incomplete.
Calcium movement depends heavily on transpiration. It moves with water through the plant. If the environment is unstable, especially under strong light, high heat, poor VPD or root stress, calcium-related symptoms can appear even when calcium is present in the solution.
Calcium-looking problems may be caused by:
Before adding Cal-Mag automatically, check the system. Ask:
Cal-Mag can solve a real shortage.
It cannot fix poor pH, salt stress or unstable roots.
Dark, glossy leaves with downward clawing often suggest excess nitrogen or overall feed strength. This is especially important during flowering. Too much nitrogen in bloom can delay maturation, reduce flower quality and create harsher final material.
But clawing can also be linked to:
Again, the leaf is a clue.
When upper leaves curl upward, fold like a taco, or show dry edges near the light, the issue is often not nutrition first. Check:
Under high light and low humidity, the plant may transpire too aggressively. Nutrients can concentrate at the leaf edge and symptoms may look like deficiency or burn. In this case, adding more nutrients is the wrong first move.
Correct the environment before correcting the bottle.
Read more here: Diagnosing Cannabis leaf issues
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When symptoms appear, do not jump straight to the nutrient bottle. Use a clear order.
If the environment is wrong, nutrient behaviour becomes unpredictable.
Roots decide what the plant can actually take up.
Know what you put in before judging what came out.
One runoff reading is information. A repeated pattern is evidence.
Only after this should you decide whether the plant needs less feed, more feed, a pH correction, a flush, a Cal-Mag adjustment, or simply a more stable environment.
| What you see | Check first |
| Pale lower leaves | Phase, input EC, root health, natural ageing |
| Pale new growth | pH, micronutrient availability, root-zone condition |
| Burnt tips | EC, runoff EC, dry-back, salt build-up, feed strength |
| Rust spots | pH, calcium supply, transpiration, excess potassium, root health |
| Dark green clawing | Nitrogen excess, high EC, overwatering, poor root oxygen |
| Upper leaves tacoing | Light intensity, heat, VPD, airflow, leaf temperature |
| Slow growth with no clear symptom | Root zone, temperature, watering rhythm, EC too low or too high |
| Many symptoms at once | pH instability, salt build-up, root stress or overcorrection |
Use this table to decide what to check first, not what to add first
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Damaged leaves rarely become perfect again. This is important. A grower may correct the problem and still stare at the old damaged leaf, thinking the plant has not improved.
The best sign of recovery is usually:
Severely necrotic tissue will not recover.
Do not judge recovery by the worst leaf on the plant.
Judge it by the next growth the plant produces.
When troubleshooting, change one main variable at a time whenever possible.
If you reduce EC, change pH, add Cal-Mag, flush, dim the light and change the watering schedule all on the same day, you will never know what helped.
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N-P-K values are not universal recipes. They are directional guides. Different fertiliser brands express ratios differently, and complete nutrient programmes include much more than N-P-K. Still, the general shift across the plant’s life is useful.
| Phase | General N-P-K direction | Main focus |
| Germination | No feeding | Seed energy is enough |
| Seedling | Low and gentle | Roots and first leaves |
| Early Vegetation | N dominant, low P | Leaf and stem development |
| Main Vegetation | N dominant, balanced K | Structure and plant health |
| Late Vegetation | N still useful, K rising | Preparing for transition |
| Pre-Flowering | More balanced | Transition into bloom |
| Blooming | Lower N, higher P/K | Flower development |
| Ripening | Very low N, K still relevant | Final maturation |
| Flushing | No feed or very low EC | Clean finish, medium reset |
A simple way to think about it:
See more here: Understanding Cannabis nutrients
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Before feeding, ask:
After irrigation, ask:
Most feeding problems are not solved by adding more bottles.
Start with water, pH, EC, oxygen, environment and root health.
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Numbers are only useful if the instrument is trustworthy.
A pH pen that has not been calibrated recently can create more problems than it solves. An EC meter with dirty probes can make a safe solution look wrong, or a strong solution look safe. Use instruments properly:
Temperature can also affect readings. Many meters compensate automatically, but consistency still matters. Take readings under similar conditions when possible.
A bad meter does not give approximate truth.
It gives false confidence.
A quick pH, EC or temperature confidence check before adjusting feed, reservoir or runoff targets.
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Water is not just water once it enters a cultivation system. It becomes the carrier of everything:
Good growing is not about chasing perfect numbers.
It is about knowing what you are putting in, understanding how the medium responds, and reading the plant before small imbalances become visible damage.
Do not diagnose the leaf before you understand the system!
After. Add all nutrients first, mix well, measure EC, then adjust pH last. Nutrients change the pH of water.
A water source can have high pH but low alkalinity, or moderate pH with enough alkalinity to cause long-term substrate drift.
Different meters may use different conversion factors, so EC is usually the cleaner number to work with.
Yes, if it is suitable. Test baseline EC, pH behaviour and, ideally, alkalinity. If tap water is very hard, very high in bicarbonates, high in sodium or chloride, or unstable, filtered or RO water may give better control.
No! You need calcium and magnesium when your water, medium or nutrient programme does not provide enough. RO water, coco coir and hydroponic systems often need more attention here.
Common reasons include bicarbonates in tap water, unstable nutrient mixes, biological activity, poor-quality pH adjustment, or measurement error. If pH always drifts upward, check source water alkalinity.
Usually salt accumulation. The medium is holding more dissolved mineral content than the fresh input solution. In coco, this is a common warning sign and may require increased runoff, lower input EC or a corrective flush.
Use manufacturer dosage as a reference, not a command. Start lower, observe the plant, and adjust based on phase, medium, light intensity, VPD, runoff and plant response.
Reduce EC when:
Most often:
Lockout does not always mean the nutrient is missing. It may be present but unavailable.
Better, no. Runoff contains whatever the medium released: salts, organic residues, unstable pH and possible pathogens. Reusing it can reintroduce problems.In controlled recirculating hydroponics, the system is managed differently, with constant monitoring and correction.
In coco and hydroponic systems, regularly. In soil, occasionally or when symptoms appear.
Runoff is most useful when you compare patterns over time, not when you panic over one reading.
The root zone may lack oxygen. Overwatered or compacted media can remain saturated long enough to reduce oxygen diffusion. Roots slow down, water uptake drops, and the plant may wilt even though water is present.
In that case, more water makes the problem worse.
They can be useful as visual references. But they should never be used alone.
The same symptom can come from pH lockout, salt build-up, overfeeding, poor roots, heat stress, light stress, pests, low oxygen or a true deficiency.
Use photos to observe. Use the system to diagnose.
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cannabis pH EC nutrients water guide
Description
A practical diagnostic guide for pH, EC, source water, nutrients and plant response. Before you add anything — understand the system.