firefly1066
Member
Does the brightness of the moon effect the dark cycle of my plants?
* hi guys, this might shed some light; check out (11) in the list.
theres a ton of write-up about this subject, but no conclusive sci-data
link ----> Spectrometer DIY
(Moon Cycles)
Since ancient times man has observed the effect of the moon on living organisms, especially his crops. Planting and harvest dates based on moon cycles are still found in the Old Farmer�s Almanac. The moon takes 28 to 29 days to completely orbit the earth. This cycle is divided into four one-week phases. It starts as the new moon waxes (begins to enlarge) for a week until the quarter moon and another week until the moon is full. Then the waning (shrinking) cycle begins and the moon passes back for two weeks through another quarter to reach the beginning of the cycle with a new moon. Most cultivators agree that the best time for planting is on the waxing moon, and the best time to harvest is on the waning moon. Exact new moons, full moons, and quarter moons are avoided as these are times of interplanetary stress. Planting, germinating, grafting, and layering are most favored during phases 1 and 2. The best time is a few days before the full moon. Phases 3 and 4 are most beneficial for harvesting and pruning.
Root growth seems accelerated at the time of the new moon, possibly as a response to increased gravitational pull from the alignment of sun and moon. It also seems that floral cluster formation is slowed by the full moon. Strong, full moonlight is on the borderline of being enough light to cease floral induction entirely. Although this never happens, if a plant is just about to begin floral growth, it may be delayed a week by a few nights of bright moonlight.
Conversely, plants begin floral growth during the dark nights of the new moon. More research is needed to explain the mysterious effects of moon cycles on Cannabis... ---Almanac
There isn't much hard info to go on as to what if any effect moonlight\lunar cycles have on plants, but so far as light leaks in comparison to moonlight goes- moonlight is nothing. The moon only appears to be very bright because of the sun's reflection upon it against the pitch black of outer space. The human eye also adapts in quite significant ways to changes in brightness. At night or in the dark your eye actually changes (pupils dilating is one of the ways it adjusts) over a period of several minutes to allow for enhancement of your visual perception, which is how we can see at all in virtual darkness.
Sunlight on a good day is about 100,000 lux while the maximum intensity of full moonlight (at high altitude in the tropics) would be 1 lux, but more commonly it is around 0.2 lux. That works out to moonlight being some half a million times fainter.