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Old 04-01-2010, 07:52 PM posted to rec.gardens
Wildbilly[_2_] Wildbilly[_2_] is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Jan 2010
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Default Pachira Aquatica - leaves dropping and my grow-lamp

In article
,
Wildbilly wrote:

In article ,
tjrundy wrote:

Hello,

This is a question regarding my Pachira Aquatica tree - see the
following pic :
http://tinyurl.com/ycohjd4. I
got it back in June, and it's been shedding leaves ever since. In the
summer months it's wasn't too bad after it stabilized, but then in the
recent months it's been loosing a branch of 6 leaves a week -
sometimes 2 per week.

Sadly it's becoming a former glory of itself, which is shame cause
it's a really cool talking point in my flat, and I love it. So much so
that I thought some additional light might help. Remembering my
friend's from university 'grow up', I bought a sodium floodlight which
is on from 4am to 7am, and then 9am through to 6pm.

I did some cursory research after wards and read that halide lights are
better than sodium lights as plants have a better reaction - I was
always taught that orange was the best colour because it was absorbed
most by green leaves. However it seems that the colour temperature has
a bearing on the efficiency of the photosynthesis...

My flood light's about 75W - is that strong enough, or is it not going
to make any difference? Would a 150W halide bulb work better? Since I
installed the lamp about 3 weeks ago, I've not noticed any reduction
in the rate of drop-off.

I think I'm sadly resigned to the fact that my flat is just too dark
(no direct sunlight except in Summer for an hour) to support such a
plant, even though they are advertised as being low light plants.

I don't think the leaf drop-off is due to over / under watering - the
planter has a bed of gravel and I keep that wet to aid humidity, and I
spray the plant every week or so (I travel a lot so I'm not actually
here that much). I let the top of the soil dry before watering - again
- typically every week. The flat's warm all year round.

Any advice?

Thanks in advance,

Tom.


I'm no expert on grow lights, but I am over wintering, again, my stevia
plants under 2', fluorescent T5 lights, and after "some" initial die
back, they rebounded and are now pushing again and flourishing without
any natural light. I'll soon be installing a larger 4' bank of lights
and hope for even healthier plants. I think that T5s may be the cheapest
way to go, unless you have already heavily invested in another approach.

Good luck,


I forgot to mention that you'll want to get the T5s in k5000 or k6000,
which is the vegetative end of the spectrum. K3000 will give you blooms,
which you may want if you are growing an "alternative" crop.
--
³When you give food to the poor, they call you a saint. When you ask why the poor have no food, they call you a communist.²
-Archbishop Helder Camara
http://tinyurl.com/o63ruj
http://countercurrents.org/roberts020709.htm