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Looking for guerillas with leaf spot diease experience.

hamstring

Well-known member
Veteran
In my opinion its not leaf spot or any other type of fungus because of the pattern. There is no fungus that I know of that leaves that pattern. Looks more like leaf miners to me.



Screen Shot 2023-10-09 at 2.48.36 PM.png
 

Mandocat

New member
Some times it just doesn't matter so there's spots. I've had some plants that are just wrecked with spots but that's just a few individuals I cull them out as they should be. I grow in soaking wet NJ and always got some spots, mostly late when who cares. Don't use fungicides, copper , neem oil etc that's just nasty. The solution is selection ,spots are everywhere when you grow in the wet.
“Give me spots on my apples
But leave me the birds and the bees
Please!”
View attachment 18830067
Selection is the only solution, in my experience! Had a pheno of Salvisa, by Lymerising Farms that had no spots, next to plants that were totally devastated. https://www.beegensbeans.com/product-page/salvisa-holiday-hookup
 

Homegrown5257

New member
I am a bottom land guerrilla . I grow in wet bottom land areas. There is always the ebb and flow of the seasons with lots of old wet dead plant material around. Don't get me wrong the soil is black gold because of the living soil going on but its rife with leaf spot too.

Severity depends on location and I always have to battle with it in some respect, wet or dry season. I have never had the pleasure of growing somewhere with great air flow and dry conditions.

It seemed like 15 years ago I never saw this shit here in the Midwest then bam! one year it was everywhere. Been here ever since.

Do any other old guerrillas remember it that way?

I am just throwing this out there but my climate has become warmer and wetter here in my little patch of heaven.
I remember it that way where I’m at. I took a long break from growing after around 97 or 98 and didn’t take it back up till 2013 and have noticed a lot more issues now vs back then.
I have wondered if it’s possible that a lot of the more modern genetics/strains are just less hardy/more susceptible to diseases due to being bred and reproduced in more perfect environments indoors.
 

Pédetoddy

Well-known member
I would hazard a guess that this is a root fungus possibly fusarium. Bet it continued to have more limbs or sections die off like that for a short time and then killed the whole plant
that was last season. But still, thank you very much. I have a plant developing the same problem this season.
 

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Captain Red Eye

Active member
Sulfur spray on plants in veg (never in flower) and removing any leaves with septoria on them can help. The blight tends to start on lower leaves and move up the plants. Helpful to clean up lower growth on plants before it takes hold.

Some strains do seem to be more resistant. Septoria can migrate from vegetable gardens, fruit trees or weeds onto cannabis. I don't usually use copper on cannabis, but it can be helpful to dust any weeds or tall grasses near an outdoor grow with copper. Both powdered copper and sulfur are commonly available in garden sections at stores or online.

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Creeperpark

Well-known member
Mentor
Veteran
View attachment 18986616 This male has a strange color inside the stem. Approximately one third of males have this color. The others are completely white as normal.
It looks like you are growing in compacted soil with a minimum amount of "root respiration".
Plants will become diseased if there is not enough oxygen in the root zone.

Do plant roots need oxygen in the root zone?

Yes, plant roots need oxygen to function properly they perform a process called "root respiration" where they absorb oxygen from the air pockets in the soil to produce energy for growth and nutrient uptake, just like other living parts of the plant.

Key points about plant roots and oxygen:

Essential for growth: Without sufficient oxygen, roots cannot properly absorb water and nutrients, leading to stunted plant growth.

Soil conditions matter: Well-drained soil with good air pockets allows for optimal oxygen availability to the roots.

Overwatering issue: Too much water in the soil can displace air, suffocating the roots.

Impact on plant health: Lack of oxygen to the roots can cause root rot and other plant diseases. google

In the future try to add a lot of organic matter (compost) to the growing area to raise the soil higher than the ground. The organic matter will hold more oxygen that the plant needs for "root respiration".
 

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