Ok, i jus went to check my babies. last nite i sprayed some "spray n grow" foilar fertilizer on them - i even tested it on some bagseed plants before i applied it to my good plants. i have like 11 plants, most in the ground some in 5 gallons, well i noticed that out of the 11, 2 were drooping very badly. they were still beautiful green, but they were slumped over at the top, the stem still straight and stirdy -like an opened umbrella. I tried to perk the tops back up, but they jus fell right back down. i really dont understand. plants like 10 feet from them are looking extremely good and arent drooping at all. the droopy ones are in the ground. maybe they have too much water..? there soil seems kind of soggy but i cant see this being the problem as plants directly around them are fine and also in the ground. could it be just that i sprayed too much on them...maybe they just need some sun to perk back up...beats me? but why just those two plants u know? i know its hard to diagnose something w/o a visual, but any ideas and preventions/cures would be extremely appreciated. thanks alot
Disagree totally with that. My babes need to be watered every 24. If I ever forget, which is almost never, they droop.
ok i got good news and some alright news about this problem, if u guys care lol. one of the plants is looking basically back to normal - 100%. it has perked up and even tho its still got some yellowish tint to the leaves, it looks so much better. thats the good news. the alright news is that the other plant, the big one, is still drooping alot but i think its trying to straighten out its leaves and pull itself back up. its still drooping, but if the other one stood straight in a day or so, maybe this one just needs an extra day or so. So thats good so far. I hope she fixes herself like the other one, i cant see why she wouldnt. just thought i'd keep ya posted, ill let u guys know how the other is as well
Overwatering causes drooping as does underwatering, but considering he is watering the plant, its fair to rule out underwatering. That leaves overwatering as the next logical explanation is maybe what I should have said to not create confusion. Apologies