I’m not exactly positive what you’re trying to point out, but it looks like maybe there are some salt crystals forming. Are you watering with tap water? Some plants don’t like that. I add a few drops of Stress Coat to my tap water and it has made a big difference. You could also use distilled or fish tank water.
Treat the soil with this stuff. Bottom water. Keep top soil dry.
m3gatoke
Hard to see in the pic so not sure whether the yellow/brown spots are actual insects or just puncture wounds from a piercing/sucking insect, but I think it’s safe to say yes you likely have an insect issue rather than bacterial/fungal. A quick/safe/cheap first step you can take is to spray the plant down with a spray bottle filled with water and a couple drops of baby shampoo, make sure to get stems and underside of leaves too. Continue scouting for pests and once you see better evidence you can ID the issue, can move from there to systemic or contact pesticides if problem persists
FabRespect93
Perhaps scale – take a leaf in a ziploc bag to your best garden store and ask for their advice
Separate_Clock_154
If those are bugs they are Bastards. I had aphids and they ravaged my indoor overwinter area. I finally got them under control and the affected plants are starting to recover but man was it a ride…
5 Comments
I’m not exactly positive what you’re trying to point out, but it looks like maybe there are some salt crystals forming. Are you watering with tap water? Some plants don’t like that. I add a few drops of Stress Coat to my tap water and it has made a big difference. You could also use distilled or fish tank water.
https://preview.redd.it/857j46enb6de1.jpeg?width=3024&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=f2a0e41377878694ad514d09eaea7248eb63d239
Treat the soil with this stuff. Bottom water. Keep top soil dry.
Hard to see in the pic so not sure whether the yellow/brown spots are actual insects or just puncture wounds from a piercing/sucking insect, but I think it’s safe to say yes you likely have an insect issue rather than bacterial/fungal. A quick/safe/cheap first step you can take is to spray the plant down with a spray bottle filled with water and a couple drops of baby shampoo, make sure to get stems and underside of leaves too. Continue scouting for pests and once you see better evidence you can ID the issue, can move from there to systemic or contact pesticides if problem persists
Perhaps scale – take a leaf in a ziploc bag to your best garden store and ask for their advice
If those are bugs they are Bastards. I had aphids and they ravaged my indoor overwinter area. I finally got them under control and the affected plants are starting to recover but man was it a ride…