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The weirdest thing happened today


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Old 02-22-2011, 11:24 PM
simon simon is offline
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Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Florida
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Default The weirdest thing happened today

. I looked all my plants this morning and everything looked fine especially my one tomato plant that's been doing excellent. 2 hours later I walk out and my tomato plant looks like somebody killed it. It was all droopy and it looked like somebody sucked the life out of it. I changed the water added new nutrient and it looks like it may be coming back to life. Can someone tell me what can cause something like that to happen so suddenly .Please anyone have any ideas so I can avoid this for the future .

FYI: My tomato plant is growing in a 5 gallon bucket, the PH in the water is 6.5, the roots are a beautiful white ,and the sandstone is working fine. I thought I would give you the growing conditions for that particular plant.
Thank you
Simon


Last edited by simon; 02-22-2011 at 11:28 PM.
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Old 02-23-2011, 02:04 AM
GpsFrontier GpsFrontier is offline
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The first thing that comes to mind is temperature, both air and water, but especially the water temp. Plants can wilt look like they are dying if the water temp is to high, even when the roots are getting plenty of water (especially if there in the sun at the same time). That would be heat stress. Think of it like wanting a nice glass of ice water after a hike in the desert on a hot day, but getting a bunch of of hot water to drink instead. As the plants transpire they suck up cool water from the roots to help regulate their internal temp (transpiring more the warmer the air temp gets). But if the water at the roots is already warm or hot, they cant do anything to help regulate their temp. If the buckets are in the sun, the water temp could easily be higher than the air temp, especially later in the day when the buckets have had time to absorb the suns rays/heat.

Also possibly the water level. The plants could be looking fine in the morning when it's cooler, but then when the air temperature warms up and the plants start to transpire more, if the water level is low they may not be getting the moisture/water uptake they need to support the increase in transpiring (water usage) later in the day when it's warmer. It could also be a combination of high water temp, and a low water levels, and the combined effects of both.
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Last edited by GpsFrontier; 02-23-2011 at 02:26 AM.
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