when do i turn on the lights

dvan2013

Member
hey guys first grow here . my seed has germinated yesterday and i placed it in the rock wool but its so slow and hasnt changed yet. should i turn the lights on yet ?
 

jeffro

Well-Known Member
yeah, turn on a florescent and keep it up a foot or so off ur plants until they get a little bigger . . . then bring them down a couple (2) inches off the top . . . that is with florescent only . .
 

dvan2013

Member
is that why my other two didnt sprout, i thought the lights had to stay off until they sprouted and the roots couldnt see light... on another note how do i get the seed to sprout with the lights on without the light hitting the moist rockwool doesnt that create algea ?
 

Brother Numsi

Well-Known Member
Think about it....if you had tossed the seed into your back yard....it would have had light at sun up. Get it going and do more reading :)
Have fun.
 

dvan2013

Member
thanks guys i do like readinf but everyone has a different opinnion i figurr i just ask and go with tthe status quo
 

kryptoniteglo

Well-Known Member
I'm on my first grow, but so far it's been successful. I started off two ways -- and the better result by far was germinating the seed in the rockwool and putting it under the CFL desk lamp right away. I did keep the cube in a dark closet until the little seedling was popping up just in case I hadn't pinched the opening completely closed and therefore ensuring the seed would pop, grow a tap root and push out the little plant with its cotyledons. But once I could see that, I gave it some light.

Then under the light for 16-18 hours a day until new leaves were growing and the root poked out the bottom. With everything done properly (no nutes, just water), it took 2.5 days to sprout and another 5 days to have new leaves and a root poking through the bottom. Then it went into my hydro system.
 

VTMi'kmaq

Well-Known Member
Think about it....if you had tossed the seed into your back yard....it would have had light at sun up. Get it going and do more reading :)
Have fun.

cant go wrong when we mimick mother nature-i;e the (cicadian rythum)Spelling? I have found that alot of questions can be awensered by watching nature.
 

Desr

Well-Known Member
just in case I hadn't pinched the opening completely closed and therefore ensuring the seed would pop, grow a tap root and push out the little plant with its cotyledons..
what are you talking about?? im all about information but i find people getting misinformed quite a bit..the only reason you pinch a seed is to make sure its still viable, that the seed isnt hollow.

EDIT: and its circadian..everything has a circadian rhythm, even humans..
 

Brother Numsi

Well-Known Member
very well brother desr, gave me some good research info "circadian cycle"
If you were addressing me, I can only do what most of us already did...and know. circadian cycle as it applies to the plants of our interest; 18/6 for veg and 12/12 for flower.....
photoperiodism (f
t
-pîr
-
-d
z
m) also photoperiodicity The response of an organism to changes in its photoperiod, especially as indicated by vital processes. For example, many plants exhibit photoperiodism by flowering only after being exposed to a set amount of daylight, as by requiring either a long or short day to flower. Plant growth, seed germination, and fruiting are also affected by day length. Photoperiodic responses in plants are regulated by special pigments known as phytochromes. In animals, migration, mating, amount of sleep, and other behaviors are also photoperiodic. In many animals, photoperiodism is regulated by the hormone melatonin.

























(f
t
-pîr
-
-d
s
-t
)
 
Top