Ultravioletcommentedweek 32d ago
Chloryphyll having problems, lime green, looks all over which is potential ph skewing alkaline. Another thing thay can effect Chloryphyll is iron, if soil gets oversaturated can mess with iron and how it converts in a medium making it unavailable.
Soon as iron gets messed up for any reason chlorpyhll replenishment ceases.
Either one of those is messing your chloryphyll. Making it lime green. It's easy to tell if your oversaturated just lift the pot and feel it.
Your using organic nitrogen. This means nitrification needs to happen before you have usable nitrogen in nitrate form.
Nitrification requires iron to process so if it's tied up or locked out via ph, everything starts to grind down.
Your humic and fulvic should have lots of iron in it though.....
Ph is the balancen of + and - soil particles
Nitrogen nh4+ cation and nitrate no3- anion
Cations ca, mg, k , sodium, nitrogen nh4+
Large portion of your nitrogen is tied up as nh4+ until it has iron to convert to no3- its potentially skewing the ratio, and pH along with it. Any ph over 7 reduces availability of iron dramatically. So begins the loop.
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