I NEED HELP PLS

LAGOAT420

New Member
Hey guys so I’m in australia and for the new season coming up in 2025 I’m planning to start my crop indoors during the last month of winter then gradually moving them outdoors in the middle of spring to get the girls that extra boosted growth my big concern is the lighting schedule it’s stressing me out already and it’s still months and months away can anyone help me please everywhere I’ve searched is mixed results I’m in the southern hemisphere and don’t get around 14 hours of daylight until november december but I’ve had plants veg just fine with 11 to 12 hours of light I’m sorry if this is all confusing because i know ya have to match the lights indoor to outdoor but i don’t want to run into the risk of early flowering so it’s just all screwing with me haha
 
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rijkmus1

Well-Known Member
Don't worry putting them out to early may trigger flowering or slow growth. Not ideal but your plants most likely will survive.
 

conor c

Well-Known Member
Hey guys so I’m in australia and for the new season coming up in 2025 I’m planning to start my crop indoors during the last month of winter then gradually moving them outdoors in the middle of spring to get the girls that extra boosted growth my big concern is the lighting schedule it’s stressing me out already and it’s still months and months away can anyone help me please everywhere I’ve searched is mixed results I’m in the southern hemisphere and don’t get around 14 hours of daylight until november december but I’ve had plants veg just fine with 11 to 12 hours of light I’m sorry if this is all confusing because i know ya have to match the lights indoor to outdoor but i don’t want to run into the risk of early flowering so it’s just all screwing with me haha
You can use regular incandescent bulbs to keep em in veg even outdoors till the light hours suit you places like Hawaii do it might be what you need
 

Amanda15

New Member
Okay, listen, I totally get the stress - its like playing Russia roulette with light schedules:blsmoke:! Plants are so sensitive to day length, so if you start them indoors during winter and then move them outside, you gotta do it like a slow waltz – gently and with finesse! 11-12 hours of light is fine at first, but come March, seriously, try cutting down on the darkness and boost those hours a bit – plants hate surprises:mad:! You definitely don’t want them to "start flowering" before they’re supposed to. And when you move them outside in spring, don’t forget the days are getting longer! That’s when your girls will go into turbo mode – that’s the moment you’ve been waiting for. So, dontr panic, control the light, and trst me, your plants will thank you later:).
 
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