Healthy Cherry Tomato

User: lucas.npk
Public report
Planta analizada
โœจ HydroScan Result
Imagen analizada 1

๐Ÿ“Š Crop Data

๐ŸŒฟ CropsCherry Tomato
๐Ÿ“ Notas del Usuario:“I want to know if everything is okay, I don't know the EC/pH but I've already fed it twice”

๐ŸŒฟ Overall Status

Health
Vitality
84%
Nutrition
Diet
Optimum
Density
Foliar
72%
Pest
Risk


!
LOW

Overall, these cherry tomato plants look healthy and active. The leaves are a good green color, the canopy is fairly full, and I do not see strong signs of major stress, disease, or pest damage. For a hydroponic setup, this is a solid start and the plants are clearly growing well.

โš ๏ธ Observations

The main thing I notice is slight crowding across the row, with some leaves overlapping and the plants stretching toward each other. That is normal at this stage, but as they get bigger it can reduce airflow and light penetration in the middle. I do not see clear yellowing, spotting, burned leaf tips, or severe drooping. Since you have already fed them twice and do not know the EC/pH, the biggest hidden risk is overfeeding or pH drift rather than a visible deficiency right now.

โœ… Solutions

1. Check and record pH and EC now, so you can confirm the feed is in range and avoid pushing the plants too hard. Use pH Meter and EC Meter .
2. Keep nutrient strength moderate, not heavy, until you know the readings. Cherry tomatoes usually do better with steady feeding than strong swings.
3. Watch the plant tops and inner leaves for crowding. If needed, gently train or thin a few leaves later so air and light can move through the canopy.
4. If the new growth starts looking pale or the plants slow down, add nutrients gradually rather than giving another strong feeding.
5. If your room runs warm or humid, improve airflow to keep the canopy dry and reduce disease risk. A Clip Fan is the best simple upgrade for that.
6. If you want to fine-tune growth further, keep an eye on temperature and humidity with a Thermometer and Hygrometer .

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