First time grower, plant leaf starts to whiten

Hello, I’m new around here, also a first time grower.

The plant is 8 weeks old, planted in soil, I only kept it indoor and didn’t do anything special but watering it once in two days, with about 200 ml of water. Last week I bought an insecticide spray because there were little tiny worms in the soil, and the leafs started to look like there were caterpillar marks on it. Could it be because I oversprayed the plant? It contained 0.06% Pyrethrins, 0.003% Deltamethrin, 0.30% Piperonyl Butoxide, I tried spraying it with clean water a few days ago but the leafs keeps getting yellowish. Could that be the reason? Also I’m not sure about the strain because I ordered a random pack with autoflowering feminized seeds.

First off welcome!

I had leaves like that starting out:

It turned out my ph was a little off and i also had sprayed the leaves and put them directly under my light.

@FusionX3
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Welcome to our world of growing here at ILGM and to our awesome community. We are all down to earth people here doing the same thing. You’ll see here soon.Any way your plants look really nice my friend and what you got there is called NUTRIENT BURN. SO you’ll need to flush your plants with P Hed water and lots of it. Then in a few days START FEEDING AGAIN ONLY USE HALF TO START WITH AND WORK YOUR WAY UP. TIL THE PLANT SHOWS SHES HAD ENOUGH

hERE READ THIS IT WILL HELP YOU…OK

SORRY ABOUT THE DAM CAPS.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          ?Nutrient Burn is one of the MOST common mistakes a new grower makes,

The reason for this is, because a newer grower will use a chemical nutrient
most of the time and listen to the directions on the box. This is a NO NO!
Depending on the age of the plant, size, strain and soil mixture you are using
also has a factor. There is no set guideline when using nutrients, but I can
give you a good example to start out with so you will not burn your plants.
It’s always good to start out light, rather than feed heavy. Remember you can
always add more later, but can not take out when you added to much. Chemical
and Organic nutrients differ. Chemical nutrients are more readily available
and can burn way easier than organics can. Organics are easier for a newer
grower to use, most of the time, and lessen your chances of burning your plants.
I recommend not using more than ½ teaspoon of chemical nutrients per gallon
of water. Unless the plants are very big 5 feet+, then it’s safe to use 1
teaspoon per gallon of water. When your plants first emerge you want to wait
at least 2 weeks before feeding your plants, unless your plants are in a soiless
mixture, like pro mix. The cotyledons (its first set of round looking leaves) are
what give the plant its food until they get the first 2 or 3 sets of leaves. If
your plants are in a soiless mixture and are over the first week of age; you can
feed a weak amount of nutrients, like ¼ teaspoon per gallon of water. Soiless
mixtures are different from soil plants and soiless plants need to be fed more
when using this mixture.

I also recommend not feeding more than 1 time a week if using ½ teaspoon per
gallon of water for chemical nutrients. You can feed every other day,( this
goes for chemical and organics) at very weak amounts, but doing this may contribute
to over watering, and for that I do not recommend feeding more than once a week.
Some people feed 2 times a week using like ¼ teaspoon per gallon of water… Use 1/4
strength for first feeding and then go up to 1/2 strength from the 2nd feeding when
using chemical nutrients. It’s very easy to overdo it. When using organics, depending
on which one you’re using, I recommend using 1 teaspoon per gallon of water. When the
plant gets bigger you can work your way up to using more nutrients when the plants
get bigger.

As for soil mixtures, there are a lot of different kinds of soil’s out there. Using a
rich soil mixture is not recommended for seedlings. Seedlings that are under 2
weeks of age you do not want to start them in rich soil, using a seed starter
mixture is one of the safer ways. Seed starter mixtures are weak in nutrients,
so it will not burn the seedlings but will provide them enough to get past seedling
stage, but the downside is you have to transplant into a better soil mixture after 2
weeks of age. If you decide to start with this mixture, do not put your seedlings
into a big pot. Start them out with using a cup or a small pot.

Nutrient Burn causes leaf tips to appear yellow or burnt. They can also be brown
and twisted and crispy looking. Depending on the severity it can show many different
symptoms and shows on lower part of the plant when its young, at older stages it
can move anywhere on the plant. The burn will creep into the center of the leaf
causing it to curl and dry up. It depends on the specific nutrient that is in excess.
For example, too much nitrogen causes leaves to curl downwards and too much potassium
creates brown spots near the edge of the leaf. Either way, nutrient burn may potentially
kill your plant or lead to it having a strong chemical taste.

To fix the problem when you have Nutrient burn, you want to flush out the plants
with lots of water.

Soil

Soil should be flushed with lots of water, Use 3 gallons of water per one gallon of soil.
Flush very thoroughly, after plant recovers usually after a week, you can resume using
nutrients after a week or a week 1/2. When you flush your soil, you flush everything out,
a lot of nutrients go with it, including the soil nutrients.

Hydro `````````````````
Change out the reservoir, flush out any lines and clean out the entire system and
replace with plain water for the first hour, then start out with lower parts per
million (PPM)
Its good to clean out your system every 2 weeks and replace with fresh water and
nutrients. Some people change everything every week!

Ahh, nute burn! Stop this by not adding to much chemical/organic nutrients to your
water,foliar feeding. DONT feed more than 1 time a week unless using weak amount,
use 1/4 strength for first feeding and then go up to 1/2 strength from then on when
using chemical nutrients. Its very easy to overdo it. Causes leaf tips to appear
yellow or burnt. NEVER give nutrients to plants that are under 2 weeks of age, at
this age the soil nutrients are enough to suppliment them untill 2 weeks of age or
more depending on how good your soil is. Using ferts before 2 weeks will almost
likley kill your plants.

@RoDeezyDoe
@garrigan62 thank you guys for the answers. I’ll try flushing the soil and the plant with clean water. Indeed, I used a liquid fertilizator
NPK 7 3 6
N 7%
NO3 3.3%
NH4 3.7%
P2O5 3%
K2O 6%
B 0.01
CU 0.002
FE 0.05
MN 0.02
ZN 0.001
MO 0.001
LOW CL CONTAIN

It had 3 marks in the cup, each for every liter. I used the first mark for 1,5 liters of water, using the solution about 2 or 3 times a week, about 200 ml each use. Also, what should I use for the little worms in the soil? Are they going to damage the root?