Is This FLOODLIGHT Keepin' Her From Flowering?

Brother Sweetleaf

Well-Known Member
Rella99- Neighbor-Floodlit.PNG

The photo says it all.

My neighbor knows I'm growing, and is OK with it, but I think this is going to warrant me initiating a little talk with him. He doesn't know better, so I'm sure it's not done maliciously... My concern is that his "need" to keep the floodlight on at night may outweigh his "belief" in me that my plant requires darkness in order to produce bud.

This sort of thing will affect flowering & bud-production, correct?

Thoughts? Feelings? Experiences? Please share...
 

SPLFreak808

Well-Known Member
Looks pretty bright to me man, I would think it could cause problems. Is the plant illuminated in the middle of the night?
 

topcat

Well-Known Member
Yeah, just talk with him. He could probably point the lamp away and still feel safe. Maybe buy him a lower wattage lamp. Otherwise, the best solution is from @Renfro with a tarp covering at sunset. A bit of a hassle, until you get into the routine.

Edit: A green lamp will make things better, too.
 
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Brother Sweetleaf

Well-Known Member
... Is the plant illuminated in the middle of the night?
Yes it will cause issues. Perhaps setup a light deprivation cover.
Yeah, just talk with him. He could probably point the lamp away and still feel safe. Maybe buy him a lower wattage lamp. Otherwise, the best solution is from @Renfro with a tarp covering at sunset. A bit of a hassle, until you get into the routine.
Thanks for responding, SPLFreak808, Renfro, & TopCat. Yeah, it's through the middle of the night, but not every night. I think he may just forget to shut it off sometimes after he goes inside, but I'm not sure. Yeah, I'll talk with him; I like your idea of options, TopCat, like pointing the light away a bit, or providing him with a dimmer lamp. But I'm afraid that I prefer the more demanding option of covering it myself with a tarp. This'll give me total control without relying on the whims & discipline of others. I just need to accelerate my plans to build more roof-support, so that when it rains, the tarp (& clear plastic covering for flower season) do not sag down, but instead will hold tight against the rain-accumulation.

Thanks again! :leaf:;)
 

Thundercat

Well-Known Member
How about just putting up a light blocking screen on that side of the green house. It sure seems like adding a screen would be cheap, and possibly easier then talking to the neighbor. Plants do not need absolute darkness, they just need mostly darkness. Think about how bright the moon is for half the month? Easily plenty of visible light to walk around outside and see things. The plants don't care. Now that flood light might be a bit to much, but a simple light blocker would solve that.
 

SuperNutz

Well-Known Member
Personally I'd get a roll of 6 mil plastic sheeting and do it high and wide enough to that the light doesn't hit any of the greenhouse and keep doubling up till it's fully blocked or really faint. Easy way is zip tie 2" x 2" x ?' every 4 foot to the fence and staple gun the sheeting to that. Could reinforce the plastic where you are going to staple with duck tape so it doesn't tear as easy... idk but since im sure you guys are all stoned and hungry I'm posting irrelevant pics of what im eating right now.... :fire:
 

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Brother Sweetleaf

Well-Known Member
Wow! I forgot about responding in this thread... Sorry for the delay, all. Excellent ideas, everyone, thanks!
How about just putting up a light blocking screen on that side of the green house. It sure seems like adding a screen would be cheap, and possibly easier then talking to the neighbor. Plants do not need absolute darkness, they just need mostly darkness. Think about how bright the moon is for half the month?... Now that flood light might be a bit to much, but a simple light blocker would solve that.
Awesome! Yeah, I think that's probably the best option for me. It turns out that indeed it's a rarity that the light is left on, by accident it seems. But although Mrs. Sweetleaf & I have been away for a few days, a light-barrier is already underway!
Have you considered reenforcing the roof by inserting rebar into the pvc to prevent the sagging?
Awesome idea, but the sagging is actually not for the PVC frame, but for the plastic sheet itself. The rain, when coming down strongly during nasty weather (which is only occasional but indeed inevitable), pools up almost exponentially-- like how an avalanche starts with just a few loose pebbles... And before long, there's a massive puddle dipping the plastic down as a loose but effective gigantic bowl, weighing-down the entire structure, threatening to spill a pool of water onto your plants. So although rebar-support to the PVC may help a bit, the problem is an effect of the plastic having no support beneath it; not so much that the PVC is too weak. These photos show last year's hoop-house I built, and the issues a no-support roof can bring when it rains:
Hoophouse Rain-Cave-In 3.png
Hoophouse Rain-Cave-In 4.png

So I'll be criss-crossing nylon cord up across & down the top-bar of the roof-peak, zig-zagging like a bunch of Xes along each side of the roof. It should be enough to prevent the problem from beginning & escalating. I'll let you guys know!
Personally I'd get a roll of 6 mil plastic sheeting and do it high and wide enough to that the light doesn't hit any of the greenhouse and keep doubling up till it's fully blocked or really faint. Easy way is zip tie 2" x 2" x ?' every 4 foot to the fence and staple gun the sheeting to that. Could reinforce the plastic where you are going to staple with duck tape so it doesn't tear as easy...
SuperNutz, you're hired! I'll see you Saturday! Awesome idea... You sound quite industrious! Your idea actually reminded me that I already have something like that already built and already outside near the damn set-up! I made a ghille blind (like a portable wall of an artificial camouflage grass-material) onto some tomato racks, the legs of which secure down into PVC pipe-stubs that are zip-tied to & poke-up from milk-crates. I used these as a portable camouflaged wall for when growing discreetly outdoors. :wink: I can just add a tarp or shower-curtain liner to it, adjusting it's height according to my needs here. And that fence makes a great spot to secure things, like you said! Thanks!
 
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FresnoFarmer

Well-Known Member
Same thing happens on one of my greenhouse. Pooling up on the top. That zigzagging sounds like a good idea. Let us know how it works out. I had a roof cave in on my long flowering Bahia Blackhead in winter of 2014. Was disappointing to the say the least.
 

blasting

Active Member
I've got the exact situation with my neighbor's floodlight. He's cool, but I opted for a couple of white tarps I can clip to my grow structure at night. I'm still in veg, so I have not used the tarps yet.
 

budsfordayz

Well-Known Member
All depends what kind of light it is and the output. I have potlights from my house indirectly on my outdoor every season and have yet to get one hermie. They're 30w LEDs tho about 20 feet up in the air so that may be why. Iv noticed of the light is reflection off something and then onto plants it doesn’t normally cause damage. If the floodlight is pointed directly at ur plants that’s a big Nono.
 
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