I've always grown anything under a light with 24/0. I figured that the more light, the better and I've read articles that argue that it matters not. I've had some kind of Thai peppers (dont know the exact type because they were brought back from Thailand by the neighbor from a trip), some basil, and one bhut jolokia that has been the saddest looking yet most resilient plant I've had ever. (The bhut was a stick after a cold snap killed all the leaves on it, I brought the stick indoors in the planter and with some artificial light and warmth, it began to spring up all kidns of leaves).
Anyway. I had them under 24/0 110w cfl (2g11 base 6400k bulbs) and they stayed alive, but I also have an infestation of thrips and can only "manage" the pests. The bugs are causing some damage but there arent that many of them (and I know, if you see 5, you have 500). In prep for more plants to get my garden stuff going to go outdoors, I bought a powerful lumigrow es330 and thought the philosophy - More Light, outgrow the problems. I put that on a 24/0 cycle too. I figured if I can get them along until its warm enough to go outside, nature will take care of my thrip problem. I'm sure there is plenty of control in spiders and other predators that will help. I played with different light settings, but always kept the constant on.
For the past 3 weeks, it was the same. A little foliage, couple leaves drop, see a few thrips and the silvery markings of their damage and the plants never got any size. I kept clipping the basil but it seems a little overwatered.
Just 2 days ago, I put it on a timer at 18/6 as an experiment because I thought the plants were just going to stay "meh" but in the last 3 cycles, I've had the plants completely change. They produced new growth immediately, leaves opened up, and they started to gain a coule cm of height. Its also been a little hotter here with the weather and the space went from the 77f to about 85f at the peak. I have a small germination tent that use like an infirmary for getting plants back to health. Its definitely amazing. I'll have to post some before/after pics (I dont have a pic host like photobucket account).
So, experiment with your light cycles. Perhaps these suckers need a little dark to rest. I've always heard that plants "sleep" and repair root systems, but I guess its part of the nature's plan. I never thought the reaction woud be a so immediate.
MHz
Anyway. I had them under 24/0 110w cfl (2g11 base 6400k bulbs) and they stayed alive, but I also have an infestation of thrips and can only "manage" the pests. The bugs are causing some damage but there arent that many of them (and I know, if you see 5, you have 500). In prep for more plants to get my garden stuff going to go outdoors, I bought a powerful lumigrow es330 and thought the philosophy - More Light, outgrow the problems. I put that on a 24/0 cycle too. I figured if I can get them along until its warm enough to go outside, nature will take care of my thrip problem. I'm sure there is plenty of control in spiders and other predators that will help. I played with different light settings, but always kept the constant on.
For the past 3 weeks, it was the same. A little foliage, couple leaves drop, see a few thrips and the silvery markings of their damage and the plants never got any size. I kept clipping the basil but it seems a little overwatered.
Just 2 days ago, I put it on a timer at 18/6 as an experiment because I thought the plants were just going to stay "meh" but in the last 3 cycles, I've had the plants completely change. They produced new growth immediately, leaves opened up, and they started to gain a coule cm of height. Its also been a little hotter here with the weather and the space went from the 77f to about 85f at the peak. I have a small germination tent that use like an infirmary for getting plants back to health. Its definitely amazing. I'll have to post some before/after pics (I dont have a pic host like photobucket account).
So, experiment with your light cycles. Perhaps these suckers need a little dark to rest. I've always heard that plants "sleep" and repair root systems, but I guess its part of the nature's plan. I never thought the reaction woud be a so immediate.
MHz