Hello,
I recently developed a taste for Habanaros. They are still a bit spicy for me (I avoid the seeds), but there is something about the complex flavor and aroma that I have become dareisay, addicted to. It's almost as if my head is hit by the floral impact before the spiciness kicks in. I've grown some other hot peppers that are pretty spicey (unknown hybrid), and for some reason I have an easier time eating habanaros, it doesn't hit me as fast and I am able to bear the heat, even though it is overall hotter.
Enough silly intro, time to talk methods.
My outside garden was kinda eaten up by Irene and grow season is almost over so I decided to grow Habs indoors using DWC.
I've never grown any food crops under artificial lighting, but I have EXTENSIVE experience growing corals in SW aquariums using every type of DIY lighting imaginable. You name it I've done it. Even have a true apogee quantum PAR meter
So I built myself a ~100w LED fixture using Cree LEDs. It's mostly LEDs I had left over from aquarium builds, so I ended up with some XPG R2s, warm white XML's, XRE's in white and royal blue and some XPEs and Rebels in Red/FarRed/Amber. 6 of the XPGs are on a non-dimmable Xitanium driver @ 700ma.
The rest of the LEDs are split in half, each half on its own dimmable Meanwell 60-48D, wired to a 5k linear Pot for manual dimming control. The cool-white XREs and Royal Blues are on one, while the Warm Whites and Reds are on the other. So I can basically fine tune both intensity and color spectrum from anything from over 10k to ~3k!! (yes it gets very blue to very warm if I go to extremes).
I am growing these in a cabinet (better temp control and light retention) with about a 1.5ft x 2ft x 4ft tall space (including space for the reservoir). I installed the LEDs with a pulley system so I can have the lights start lower and raise with the plants, but there is only about 1foot of travel on the lights.
I experimented with all different size optics for the LEDs. Initially I mixed half tight optics with half medium optics (tight is ~10-15degrees FWHM, medium is 15-25). I found that the tight optics are useless unless the lights will be several feet away, since you will get hotspots that are brighter than the sun and could potentially burn leaves.
I ended up swapping most of the optics to Wide Frosted style to get the best diffusion, with only a few medium optics spaced on the outer edges.
PAR Results:
With the Medium and Tight optics, my LED fixture was measuring well over 2000 PAR (or ppfd, measured in umoles per m2 per second), but the readings were uneven (ie, one measurement is 1500, and one inch to the left is 2500). FYI, natural sunlight peaks around 2100-2200 PAR according to my own measurements in NC, and in the shade measured ~200-300 PAR (about the output of a single T5 lamp a few inches away without refletors).
When I switched to the Wide optics, it did reduce the peak intensity quite a bit, but I am still able to get readings around 2000 PAR up to 12" below the lights.
The IDEAL setup would be to use only the Tight optics and have them several feet away, such as on the ceiling. Then you could use a wider spacing between the LEDs and get nice smooth coverage and waste VERY little light. I actually built an aquarium like this once where you couldn't even locate the light fixture (hidden in ceiling alcove), yet inside the tank was the equivalent of sunlight. Maybe next time
Ok, I wrote WAY more than I planned to about the LEDs. As you can see I know a lot about LEDs and other lighting sources (and no, it is NOT as simple as saying LEDs or MH are better, it really depends on so many factors like size of the grow, scalability etc. MH will waste more light emitting sideways away from plants, but for a large style grow this won't matter, since plants will likely be on all sides). I just think LEDs are particularly well suited to a small grow because of the control you get. Sure a few CFLs also work in a small grow but you end up waste alot more light.
I will post another followup post with pictures tonight.
Next year I will probably grow new plants from seeds, but I got impatient and ordered some plants from amazon.
Got my plants about 10 days ago, in little 2.5" square pots. I transplanted into DWC about 7 days ago. The info said they had germinated approx 95 days ago, much older than I thought they would be. Both plants already 6" tall and there are a few young green peppers already.
They were insanely root bound, with outer roots circling the plant several times (yikes). I was more or less able to untangle and get them into 4" net pots with hydroton and into the Res.
They are currently sharing a 6gal res.
Running Lucas Formula GH Micro+Bloom. I started at 2/3 strength and recently topped up with a bit higher which brought EC to 1.6 range.
The existing roots on both plants have not grown much, but I see new roots shooting out the bottom and sides, and these new roots are very fuzzy and wide at the base, pointy at the end.
I have been keeping the water level down about an inch below the net pots, and they get plenty of water (it spills out if you remove a net pot).
Keeping pH at 5.75, and it has been VERY VERY stable, I think because of the Myco+EWC tea. Every 2 days the ph will rise by 0.05 or so, which is the most stable pH I've ever seen (this is my first hydro grow, but I ran a few "trial run" with no plants and no tea, just resevoir with air bubbles and nutes, and before the tea, my ph would rise WAY faster!).
So after the first 3-4 days of transplanting, both plants lost the bottom 4 largest leaves (turned pale yellow and drooped away). This seems to have stopped (around the time I increased EC from 1.4 to 1.6), and the plants are greening back up, but there is still an overall slightly pale color.
Tonight they are due for a full reservoir change. Should I go full strength on the Lucas, which I think will get me an EC of around 1.8 or 2? I'm thinking this because the plants are a bit pale and are pretty old, and now that there are some fresh roots maybe the plants can handle it?
Thanks of reading my longwinded post!
I recently developed a taste for Habanaros. They are still a bit spicy for me (I avoid the seeds), but there is something about the complex flavor and aroma that I have become dareisay, addicted to. It's almost as if my head is hit by the floral impact before the spiciness kicks in. I've grown some other hot peppers that are pretty spicey (unknown hybrid), and for some reason I have an easier time eating habanaros, it doesn't hit me as fast and I am able to bear the heat, even though it is overall hotter.
Enough silly intro, time to talk methods.
My outside garden was kinda eaten up by Irene and grow season is almost over so I decided to grow Habs indoors using DWC.
I've never grown any food crops under artificial lighting, but I have EXTENSIVE experience growing corals in SW aquariums using every type of DIY lighting imaginable. You name it I've done it. Even have a true apogee quantum PAR meter
So I built myself a ~100w LED fixture using Cree LEDs. It's mostly LEDs I had left over from aquarium builds, so I ended up with some XPG R2s, warm white XML's, XRE's in white and royal blue and some XPEs and Rebels in Red/FarRed/Amber. 6 of the XPGs are on a non-dimmable Xitanium driver @ 700ma.
The rest of the LEDs are split in half, each half on its own dimmable Meanwell 60-48D, wired to a 5k linear Pot for manual dimming control. The cool-white XREs and Royal Blues are on one, while the Warm Whites and Reds are on the other. So I can basically fine tune both intensity and color spectrum from anything from over 10k to ~3k!! (yes it gets very blue to very warm if I go to extremes).
I am growing these in a cabinet (better temp control and light retention) with about a 1.5ft x 2ft x 4ft tall space (including space for the reservoir). I installed the LEDs with a pulley system so I can have the lights start lower and raise with the plants, but there is only about 1foot of travel on the lights.
I experimented with all different size optics for the LEDs. Initially I mixed half tight optics with half medium optics (tight is ~10-15degrees FWHM, medium is 15-25). I found that the tight optics are useless unless the lights will be several feet away, since you will get hotspots that are brighter than the sun and could potentially burn leaves.
I ended up swapping most of the optics to Wide Frosted style to get the best diffusion, with only a few medium optics spaced on the outer edges.
PAR Results:
With the Medium and Tight optics, my LED fixture was measuring well over 2000 PAR (or ppfd, measured in umoles per m2 per second), but the readings were uneven (ie, one measurement is 1500, and one inch to the left is 2500). FYI, natural sunlight peaks around 2100-2200 PAR according to my own measurements in NC, and in the shade measured ~200-300 PAR (about the output of a single T5 lamp a few inches away without refletors).
When I switched to the Wide optics, it did reduce the peak intensity quite a bit, but I am still able to get readings around 2000 PAR up to 12" below the lights.
The IDEAL setup would be to use only the Tight optics and have them several feet away, such as on the ceiling. Then you could use a wider spacing between the LEDs and get nice smooth coverage and waste VERY little light. I actually built an aquarium like this once where you couldn't even locate the light fixture (hidden in ceiling alcove), yet inside the tank was the equivalent of sunlight. Maybe next time
Ok, I wrote WAY more than I planned to about the LEDs. As you can see I know a lot about LEDs and other lighting sources (and no, it is NOT as simple as saying LEDs or MH are better, it really depends on so many factors like size of the grow, scalability etc. MH will waste more light emitting sideways away from plants, but for a large style grow this won't matter, since plants will likely be on all sides). I just think LEDs are particularly well suited to a small grow because of the control you get. Sure a few CFLs also work in a small grow but you end up waste alot more light.
I will post another followup post with pictures tonight.
Next year I will probably grow new plants from seeds, but I got impatient and ordered some plants from amazon.
Got my plants about 10 days ago, in little 2.5" square pots. I transplanted into DWC about 7 days ago. The info said they had germinated approx 95 days ago, much older than I thought they would be. Both plants already 6" tall and there are a few young green peppers already.
They were insanely root bound, with outer roots circling the plant several times (yikes). I was more or less able to untangle and get them into 4" net pots with hydroton and into the Res.
They are currently sharing a 6gal res.
Running Lucas Formula GH Micro+Bloom. I started at 2/3 strength and recently topped up with a bit higher which brought EC to 1.6 range.
The existing roots on both plants have not grown much, but I see new roots shooting out the bottom and sides, and these new roots are very fuzzy and wide at the base, pointy at the end.
I have been keeping the water level down about an inch below the net pots, and they get plenty of water (it spills out if you remove a net pot).
Keeping pH at 5.75, and it has been VERY VERY stable, I think because of the Myco+EWC tea. Every 2 days the ph will rise by 0.05 or so, which is the most stable pH I've ever seen (this is my first hydro grow, but I ran a few "trial run" with no plants and no tea, just resevoir with air bubbles and nutes, and before the tea, my ph would rise WAY faster!).
So after the first 3-4 days of transplanting, both plants lost the bottom 4 largest leaves (turned pale yellow and drooped away). This seems to have stopped (around the time I increased EC from 1.4 to 1.6), and the plants are greening back up, but there is still an overall slightly pale color.
Tonight they are due for a full reservoir change. Should I go full strength on the Lucas, which I think will get me an EC of around 1.8 or 2? I'm thinking this because the plants are a bit pale and are pretty old, and now that there are some fresh roots maybe the plants can handle it?
Thanks of reading my longwinded post!