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Old 03-05-2010, 04:09 PM
GpsFrontier GpsFrontier is offline
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Location: Lake Havasu AZ.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by eduardomachado View Post
I fixed the PH was a little too high
That's interesting, if anything I was thinking it was a little low. But certainly not enough to cause the problems you described. What did you change the pH to? 5.5? I keep my tomato's at 6.0. They are still young at this point, but as far as I can tell they look very healthy. Now that the weather is warming up they are starting to grow faster also. I just sent General Hydroponics a e-mail about it, hopefully they will reply sometime today.

I do know that specific plant requirements will vary (even for the same variety) according to regional climatic conditions, and from season to season within that region, as well as growing conditions. But I wouldn't think that a .05 difference in pH either way would cause the plant to abort fruiting.
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