Going to use indoors by a south facing window as an example. Plant gets min. sunlight but is plenty warm because your house is warm. It is early spring, night temps only get down to 50. You want to put your plants outside. Of course you have to harden them off / introduce them to the new conditions slowly. We've talked about methods. We've talked about why. But I dont think there is a conversation about what it is the plants are doing while we are hardening them off.
Temperature - .If you suddenly change the temp from 75 degrees to 50 degrees, you will have sick plants. But if you introduce them gradually to lower temperature, they adapt. What is changing in the plant to let them deal with the lower temps?
Sunlight - If you go from min. window light to full direct sunlight, chances are you will get some burnt leaves. But if you do things like give them a little each day by moving them in and out or putting them in a partial shaded area, well then something changes and the plants can manage. What do you suppose changes?
Wind - This one is probably a no brainer. Stems get thicker the same way we grow scars. Moving the stem back and forth makes tiny little things break and rebuild, making the stem thicker.
My Guess is that there is something about natural sunlight that stimulates the growth of what ever it is that protects the plants from natural sunlight. Hard to imagine the same is true of cold, so I wonder if what ever it is that protects them from lower temp is not triggered by the sunlight rather than the cold.
Thoughts? Other guesses?
Temperature - .If you suddenly change the temp from 75 degrees to 50 degrees, you will have sick plants. But if you introduce them gradually to lower temperature, they adapt. What is changing in the plant to let them deal with the lower temps?
Sunlight - If you go from min. window light to full direct sunlight, chances are you will get some burnt leaves. But if you do things like give them a little each day by moving them in and out or putting them in a partial shaded area, well then something changes and the plants can manage. What do you suppose changes?
Wind - This one is probably a no brainer. Stems get thicker the same way we grow scars. Moving the stem back and forth makes tiny little things break and rebuild, making the stem thicker.
My Guess is that there is something about natural sunlight that stimulates the growth of what ever it is that protects the plants from natural sunlight. Hard to imagine the same is true of cold, so I wonder if what ever it is that protects them from lower temp is not triggered by the sunlight rather than the cold.
Thoughts? Other guesses?