This week has been hard for the plants. Leaf miners attacked them and I fought them with neem oil. The parasites are gone but I don't understand why the leaf is still dying
@Ganjagrandaddy, Yeah I understand but the threat from the parasite is gone and the tips of the leaves are still drying... I can't understand why( I just uploaded the new week)
don't cut them. Rhey are the plants 1st emergency meal from sprouting. She will eat them herself by withdrawing the stored nutrients in them. This is usually a goos point to start feeding them with nutrients too. They are called cotyledons. ( coty for short) . look nice and healthy.
you could let them get more rooted in the pot and wait u till the root all is a little bigger too. they will love you for it that way. ideally try to catch them just before the roots start to swirl around the pot ( root bound) once you repot them , they will spread out those thicker roots very quickly to find the nutes/water in the pot. if the pot is too big , they will only send tap roots to find the sources and then begin to build a root ball. Nice recovery too. look how green and mean it looks now. excellent start for some good veg time. Good luck
the offspring may have been feeding. take the leaves off if the damage gets to about 50%. Should be OK with the many other leaves still supporting growth. 😀
@Ganjagrandaddy, Yeah I understand but the threat from the parasite is gone and the tips of the leaves are still drying... I can't understand why( I just uploaded the new week)
@Hermes88,I mean before dying off they fed. if thebleaf doesn't show further scars of the burrowing pest it's OK to leave but of any newly emerged offspring are on them then remove the leaf complete and away from the other plants to avoid infecting them. looks likeny9u fixed it now though
@Ganjagrandaddy, what do you mean for the offspring? the children of the animals spread? Do I have to cut the leaves? And so it's not an excess of nutrients
hi buddy. judging by the trail left , it looks like a pest. look underneath the leaf. could be a leaf miner. Dish-soap a few (drops) and a little bicarbonate of soda mixed in water for a spray bottle
@Hermes88 es normal que la planta se alimente de sus hojas más inferiores, ya que reciben menos luz directa y la planta entiende que por ahí no va a generar cogollos, de modo que se alimenta de los nutrientes que tiene en esas hojas, se tornan amarillas y se caen
Si las hojas de abanico principales y las hojas de la copa están bien, de un color verde sano, no debes preocuparte!