Fluorescent Grow Lights Great for Home Gardeners

July 6, 2018

Fluorescent lamps are popular with home gardeners for grow lighting. You can expect a fluorescent tube to give you about 20,000 hours of light for growing. That’s roughly three years if you’re using the lamp to light plants for 16 hours a day every day of the year.

These T5 Fluorescent lamps are lighting a propagation table in a glass greenhouse. Even glass greenhouses need supplemental light.
PC: Leslie F. Halleck

You can use HO T5 fluorescent tube lamps in just about any fixture that holds traditional fluorescent tubes, so they are an easy and affordable solution for most home growers.

Gardening Under Lights Book


Gardening Under Lights: Is it a SCANDALOUS book?

July 5, 2018

More than a few people (and reviewers) have made comments that there is cannabis information in my new book, "Gardening Under Lights: The Complete Guide for Indoor Growers", and they find that a bit scandalous or negative. So, I figured I’ll address why I included it. Well, I included it because my publisher asked me to include it.

Yes, I do teach you about the basics of growing cannabis.

But first and foremost, I’m a professional horticulturist. It’s my job to study the “how” of growing plants -all sorts of plants- both outdoors and indoors. In turn, I then teach other people how to do it. I’ve never taken heroine, but I can tell you how to grow the beautiful poppies from which opium is created. Because I’m a horticulturist. As humans, we use a lot of plants for a lot of different purposes. Where would we be without food plants… medicinal plants…or plants we use for textiles? People and plants are co-evolved species as far as I’m concerned. Plants are not to be feared, but rather respected.

I love using LEC/CMH lamps for growing peppers and tomatoes indoors in winter.

I wrote this book so that all people interested in growing all sorts of plants indoors, would have access to a resource that met their needs – a resource that wasn’t solely focused on cannabis. Most of the indoor growing books out there are related to cannabis growing, and many are too anecdotal for my taste. If you want to grow tomatoes, or lettuce, or citrus indoors, you should have a book that gives you useful information specific to those crops – you shouldn’t have to slink around the bookstore with a cannabis-only growing book so you can figure out grow lighting.

However, growing cannabis is becoming more mainstream – so it seemed we’d be neglecting a key target consumer if I skipped cannabis altogether. Most of the indoor growing retail market – in terms of grow lights and environmental gear – is geared towards the cannabis growers. I also want to make sure that everyone else knows how to use the same gear to grow all the other wonderful plants they desire to keep indoors.

I'll teach you how to germinate seeds successfully and grow microgreens.

Frankly, I don’t find talking about how to grow Cannabis sativa any more scandalous than teaching you how to grow wine grapes or hops. Given all the tangible medicinal and textile uses and benefits of cannabis, I don’t see how learning a bit more about the plant itself should make anyone blush. But if it does make you blush (and that's OK), know that it’s tucked into the herb section and you’re welcome to skip it! If you're into growing cannabis (and it's legal for you to do so), then you can also rely on "Gardening Under Lights".

The beauty of my book is that its all-inclusive. All the science you’ll need, whether you want to grow tomatoes or cannabis indoors, is there for you to use. The information I provide on light science, grow lighting, environmental control, propagation, and pests and diseases can be used by anyone, growing just about anything, indoors. 😊


Use a Humidity Dome for Seedlings

July 5, 2018

It is key to maintain proper moisture levels for your seedlings. The growing media should always be damp to the touch, similar to a wrung-out sponge. Humidity domes can help media from drying out too much.

Seeds germinating under humidity domes.
PC: Leslie F. Halleck

Do not overwater seeds that haven’t yet germinated, as they can rot. Use a plant mister bottle to keep the soil surface moist until seeds germinate, then begin adding a little water to the seed tray so the growing media can absorb it as seedlings mature.

Gardening Under Lights Book


Are Unfertilized Female Cannabis Plants More Potent?

July 4, 2018

Cannabis grows wild in both temperate and tropical areas around the world. It is used as a medicinal and recreational herb for its active compound, THC. Cannabis has been intensively selected, bred, and cultivated, and many varieties and cultivars vary widely from the original species and naturally occurring ecotypes.

PC: Dan Heims

Unfertilized female plants are much more potent than fertilized plants. You can purchase feminized seed to ensure more female plants. If you’re trying to hybridize and generate new F1 seed, you need male plants to fertilize the female flowers. About 50 percent of your new seed will be male.

New BOOK! Gardening Under Lights: The Complete Guide for Indoor Growers


UV-A and UV-B light

July 3, 2018

Some fluorescent grow lamps are available with spectrums weighted to specific color ranges, such as red or blue. But some lamps take it a step further, emitting different types of UV light.

These fluorescent grow lamps emit specific ranges of UV-A and UV-B radiation.
PC: Sunlight Supply, Inc.

UV light can influence different functions in a plant, and can influence things such as flavor and antioxidants. If you're using grow lamps that emit UV light, be sure to use the same protection for your eyes and skin when working around them as you would in bright sunlight.

Gardening Under Lights Book!



Light-emitting Plasma LEP Grow Lamps

July 2, 2018

Light-emitting Plasma, or LEP, grow lamps are emerging grow lighting technology for indoor gardeners. LEPs have no electrode or filament, but they use sulfur plasma with microwave radiation. LEP lamps operate like a hybrid between HID lighting and a solid-state LED light.

LEP lamps are emerging grow light technology.
PC: Sunlight Supply, Inc.

LEPs can deliver a wider spectrum of light than traditional MH or HPS lamps, with better efficiency and potentially lower heat output. Manufacturers of induction and plasma lights claim they are as energy efficient as fluorescents and produce moderate to almost no heat outputs.

Gardening Under Lights Book


Grow Phalaenopsis Orchids

July 1, 2018

Phalaenopsis orchids, also known as moth orchids, are one of the most common types of orchids sold and kept indoors. They are generally easy to care for and bloom for long periods. Keep in medium- to bright-light, and water under a slow-running faucet for several minutes once per week.

Phalaenopsis are the most commonly sold orchids these days. This lovely green color is one of my favorites.
PC: Leslie F. Halleck

Phalaenopsis spp. grow best in warm temperatures between 66°F and 86°F (19–30°C) during the day. Ideal night temperatures fall between 60°F and 66°F (15–19°C). It is this cooling of temperatures that spur plants to flowering, generally in late-winter and early-spring. To keep plants healthy indoors year-round, add supplemental light from fluorescent or LED grow lights.

New BOOK! Gardening Under Lights: The Complete Guide for Indoor Growers


Grow Lithops, Living Stones, Indoors

June 30, 2018

Ok, there just might not be a cuter plant than living stones. These tiny, fleshy succulents are perfect for small space indoor gardeners who also happen to be forgetful waterers.

Living stones…don’t you just want to pinch them?
PC: Leslie F. Halleck

Lithops, or living stones, can be tricky to grow indoors because different species may have different environmental needs, but all need bright light and should be grown under grow lights indoors. They are highly desirable, especially for collectors who love miniature plants. Water sparingly, as these fleshy plants will quickly turn to mush with too much water.

Gardening Under Lights Book


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