Clip on lamps for seeds ?

Wind Notes & Butterflies

Chillin' In The Garden
Joined
Sep 14, 2009
Messages
20
Reaction score
0
Points
27
Location
Georgia
Thanks Wifezilla and your plants look so healthy and happy.
I'm going to walmart this weekend and pick me up some of the clamp lamps and the CFL bulbs.
I get so excited this time of year and just can't wait till spring :mow
 

silkiechicken

Deeply Rooted
Moderator
Joined
Nov 13, 2007
Messages
543
Reaction score
1
Points
109
Location
Everett WA, Corvallis OR
I'm so jealous at your starts! I don't even get to start mine for another few weeks b/c I can't plant out till may and find that getting them in the ground prior to any buds is better for their establishment.

The trick with the tubes is to get enough foot candles down in the right spectrum and to remember to replace them before their steady state output is gone. I generally replace bulbs once a year in my planted aquariums because even if you can see the light, doesn't mean it is giving out the right light any more or at the full output. The old fashioned T20's are pretty inefficient. T5 is getting down in price, T2's are still novelty new, so T8 is most economical for bulbs per area of mounting space. For just starts, a combo of cool white and full spectrum works great. I tend to run 3000 foot candles over the starts.

These are all I have this early in the year:



I can't wait to get the tomatoes going like last year, I save up all my vente coffee cups all year long! I should really curb that coffee habit... but what can you expect as a seattlite. :p

 

lesa

Garden Master
Joined
Nov 10, 2008
Messages
6,645
Reaction score
570
Points
337
Location
ZONE 4 UPSTATE NY
Silkie, those plants look great. What are you growing? Looks like you have really solved the leggy issue. Enjoy!
 

cknmom

Chillin' In The Garden
Joined
Dec 9, 2007
Messages
94
Reaction score
1
Points
35
Location
Dickson TN
silkiechicken- WE recently bought our turtle a larger tank and decided to try his old one to start my seeds in. I am using a large clip on worklight type of thing witha flourescent heatbulb (the ones we use for our well pumps etc.), we bought some plastic light covers the sheets like you put over large kitchen ceiling lights :)hu don't know how else to explain it). They were getting VERY moist so we were venting it, then I took it completely off. The main problem I am having is most of the plant are VERY leggy. I thought that maybe the light was too far away and thought that if I fill the aquarium half way with soil and plant directly in the soil instead of pots that maybe it would solve the legginess. Any suggestions?? Anyone??

Monica
 

Latest posts

Top