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Radish sprouts have fallen over
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Author:  zoborowi [ Aug 13th, '12, 06:12 ]
Post subject:  Radish sprouts have fallen over

My radishes started growing great then fall over. Did I plant them to shallow?

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Author:  Charlie [ Aug 13th, '12, 06:37 ]
Post subject:  Re: Radish sprouts have fallen over

Id say its got something to do with your water level :think:

Author:  zoborowi [ Aug 13th, '12, 06:42 ]
Post subject:  Re: Radish sprouts have fallen over

Thank you for the reply Charlie. My water is coming up just under an inch below the surface of the baked clay media. Does it need to be closer to to surface or further away.

Author:  Charlie [ Aug 13th, '12, 06:45 ]
Post subject:  Re: Radish sprouts have fallen over

An inch should be fine. Looking at your photo, are they those long radishes? Ive got some of those in my system and they do the same thing. I dont think its a problem.

Author:  Bender [ Aug 13th, '12, 06:55 ]
Post subject:  Re: Radish sprouts have fallen over

Could also be light. Are your growbeds in full sun?

Author:  zoborowi [ Aug 13th, '12, 06:59 ]
Post subject:  Re: Radish sprouts have fallen over

They are Early Scarlet Globe Radish. I'll let them go longer, but in the mean time I purposely buried one deeper to see what happens.

This is an indoor basement system. I am only running a pair of cool white T5 florescent lights. So lights could be the issue for sure.

Author:  earthbound [ Aug 13th, '12, 07:58 ]
Post subject:  Re: Radish sprouts have fallen over

Yep, classic symptoms of lack of light, plants stretching to try and find light.

Author:  Charlie [ Aug 13th, '12, 08:01 ]
Post subject:  Re: Radish sprouts have fallen over

come to think of it, the radishes of mine that do that are all underneath some bigger plants with minimal light.

well there ya go, thanks

Author:  zoborowi [ Aug 21st, '12, 23:12 ]
Post subject:  Re: Radish sprouts have fallen over

I picked up some new lights. Sylvania T8 Gro-Lux F032/GRO/AQ/ECO/2/30.I did some research and I thought I read that they were 6500 kelvin color temperature bulbs. Now after I bought them I've discovered that they are 3200 kelvin color temperature bulbs.

I've done some reading on these forums and the 6500 kelvin bulbs were recommended. Just wondering if I messed up or will these work. It looks like 3200 kelvin has the highest photosynthetically active radiation value. If I did mess up are there any suggestions on some T8 bulbs I should get?

Author:  earthbound [ Aug 22nd, '12, 10:27 ]
Post subject:  Re: Radish sprouts have fallen over

Need someone like Mr Damage to step in here.. He knows about these things.. I thought Kelvin was a measure of temperature... :dontknow:

Author:  bunson [ Aug 22nd, '12, 10:49 ]
Post subject:  Re: Radish sprouts have fallen over

Colour temperature refers to the temperature to which one would have to heat a theoretical "black body" source to produce light of the same visual colour.

http://www.3drender.com/glossary/colortemp.htm wrote:
So, why do we measure the hue of the light as a "temperature"? This was started in the late 1800s, when the British physicist William Kelvin heated a block of carbon. It glowed in the heat, producing a range of different colors at different temperatures. The black cube first produced a dim red light, increasing to a brighter yellow as the temperature went up, and eventually produced a bright blue-white glow at the highest temperatures. In his honor, Color Temperatures are measured in degrees Kelvin, which are a variation on Centigrade degrees. Instead of starting at the temperature water freezes, the Kelvin scale starts at "absolute zero," which is -273 Centigrade. (Subtract 273 from a Kelvin temperature, and you get the equivalent in Centigrade.) However, the color temperatures attributed to different types of lights are correlated based on visible colors matching a standard black body, and are not the actual temperature at which a filament burns.


1500 K Candlelight
2680 K 40 W incandescent lamp
3000 K 200 W incandescent lamp
3200 K Sunrise/sunset
3400 K Tungsten lamp
3400 K 1 hour from dusk/dawn
5000-4500 K Xenon lamp/light arc
5500 K Sunny daylight around noon
5500-5600 K Electronic photo flash
6500-7500 K Overcast sky
9000-12000 K Blue sky



Scott

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