Easy bro, put yours on table under your carport near the front where the sun only gets light there for a little bit if at all. I'd leave them out for a week of indirect light, then start progressing them into the light an hour or so at a time for a couple weeks.3 years ago I got lucky and planted out with no hardening on the beginning of an overcast week. 2 years ago a full week of sun killed them all, so last year I did the in and out thing. I would love to find a different way too.
Good info!I agree with the last to replies, acclimate them gradually, the plants can become sunburned very easy. Try to find a shady area, your plants will still receive ambient reflected light while in the shade, I like to expose the plants to some gradual late afternoon sun. Doing so over a 2 wk period. Overcast or cloudy bright is what I hope for. If the plants gets burned, the leaves will start to take on a translucent look. That's not good and chances are that the plant will not recover to full potenial. You could place plants under a patio table or umbrella, just make sure they get watered in the morning. Black gal containers tend to heat up and the soil will dry up quickly
on you.
Greg
I do mine on the front porch for 1-2 hours a day for a week then up it to 4. I keep a close eye for leaves starting to fade/whiten. If I see that they are right back under the lights inside. If you get lucky enough to have your week of hardening be overcast you should have no problem. In 2009 I was just getting into starting early instead of seed to garden. Had no clue of hardening and planted out 30 plants. Tiny leggy little things and it just so happened to be overcast all week. Great little garden that year. 2010 more plants and again plant right to the garden no hardening, I knew about it now, but obviously didn't need it, bigger leggy babies and past year experience. As the bright sunny week cooked and killed them I remembered '09's overcast week. Live and learn.Wow this is a topic I am very interested in and from what I'm hearing I think I need to start my grow tomorrow instead of next week . So I'd love to hear some real world experience about how long this process takes and what is the goal? Say you start to harden and it's rainy and cloudy everyday does it still work? Or do you have to get them used to the sun?I live in Portland Or and will be hardening in May will 2 weeks be enough? And what if there is no sun?