Quote:
Originally Posted by rick84
if you have t-12 they could be enough for vegatitive growth depending on the wattage. The cat will need more wattage to flower and in a dominant red/orange hue. HPS or 2700k/2800k or, a dual spectrum cfl to maintain an even balance of reds and blues. MOST orchids are photoperiodic and take their cue to flower based on the total hrs of light received and dominant wavelength. Blue to grow and red to flower. With a dual spectrum bulb all you do is switch the hrs from 16 down to 12 for flowers. And a temp drop of 10-15.
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Chris, generally, people say that Catt needs lots of light to flower, but some of them can flower with less. Long time ago, when I was a high school kid, one of my standard Cattleya hybrid flowered regularly under 2x 40W T12. You have to place the leaves almost touching to the bulbs (about a couple inches, without overheating the leaves). So it may work. However, if your fixture can handle T8, you should change the bulbs to 32W T8. You get more light with lower energy consumption than T12. But if you can afford T5 HO, you can provide more light for a given area.
Rick, are MOST orchids really photoperiodic? I wouldn't expect that from plants coming from near equator. Also, with Cattleya, there are quite a bit of different growth pattern among different species. So reducing the temp and lower day length may not be the flowering cue for all species.
---------- Post added at 10:51 AM ---------- Previous post was at 10:38 AM ----------
OK, I was curious about photoperiodicity, so a quick google search to answer my question:
http://www.cvios.com/Doctor%20Archiv...and%20temp.pdf
Bottom of p.3, it says most of hybrids are speculated to be day neutral even though it is not tested. Some species appear to be facultatively photoperiodic (i.e. night length is not absolutely required to induce flowering). Some Cattleya (C. labiata, C. mossiae, C. trianaei etc.) are short day, and others (C. dowiana, C. intermedia) are long day plants.