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Using T12 Fluorescent for Houseplant Supplement

elfinn
15 years ago

I perused the posts here and didn't really see any info on using grow lights is combination with natural light, so here's my question...

It's January in Michigan, all of my "good" (South and West-facing) windows are full, and I have to move some of my high light plants that were thriving in a SW window at work. I just inherited a plant rack with shelves that each have 2 4-foot T12 ballasts per 48" shelf which I placed in front of an East-facing window. In the ballasts I put one each 40W plant/aquarium full-spectrum and 40W cool white bulb. Basically, there are 4 lights per shelf, with the grow lights in the middle two sockets.

The highest shelf will get natural light only (put some Poinsettias and a Monstera seedling there to overwinter), the middle shelf will get artificial and natural light ..if the sun ever shines here... and the lower I plan on using for some cacti and lithops--keeping the ballasts within an inch or so from them. What I'm wondering, is, between the Eastern sunlight and supplemental fluorescent (about a foot away), will my Desert Rose, constantly flowering Crown of Thorns, Pachira, Love Leaf and Norfolk Pine be happy?

I don't have any equipment to measure lumens or footcandles, but in anyone's experience, has this been a good arrangement?

Your expertise is greatly appreciated!

Ellen

Comment (1)

  • hautions11
    15 years ago

    Doesn't sound too bad at all, suppliamental sunlight seems to help a lot when growing under artificial light. We are growing under a 400 watt metal halide but also right inside of massive south-facing windows. You'll often notice plants growing in windows, especially in the winter, staying alive but in a sort of state of "stasis" showing very little if any growth. I think that even mild artificial grow lamps are enough to push them "over the edge" to continue growing indoors. Your shelf sounds nice (though pictures would be appreciated to get a better feel for your setup). Fluorescents work perfectly well but they have very little penetrating power and thus a rather miserable effective range. "about a foot away" is really too far, you want to get those puppies as close as physically possible to your foliage. Also, there is a way of getting more light energy from long florescent tubes where you want it. Get 2 inch wide foil tape with clear adhesive and very carefully stick it on the back side of your florescent tube which faces away from your plants and towards your reflector, directly on the bulb, be sure to avoid folds bubbles and wrinkles. Make sure the tape falls an inch or two short of the end caps as the bulb is hottest here and you definitely don't want the metal tape to create a short between the usually metal caps. If you got the tape on there nice and straight with a minimum of imperfections the tubes will be noticeably brighter on the side facing your plants. This works by reflecting the photons directly back out the front side of the bulb instead of them coming out of the backside, hitting whatever reflector you have and then making their way back down to the plants. The trick to a successful florescent grow is to keep the distance that the light has to travel as short as possible and this technique minimizes that distance by several inches. This is a reliable technique and has no apparent ill effects on the bulb, I have seen tubes so equipped run for years. Just a few tweaks and I think you will be blooming beautifully all winter. Good luck and happy gardening!
    -Zach