So I have a single CFL above my avocado tree in my room. Because trees grow upwards, the bulb must face downwards. Simple logic correct? Well, apparently not for some. This particular bulb burned out after 1.5 months of 12 hours a day. Wayyyyy too early. I brought it back to McGuckins (like Home Depot/ Lowes) and the guy told me CFLs will burn out way earlier if they point down as opposed to upward. I told him since I use it as a grow bulb, (as advertised on the box) I need to to point down because I cannot invert a tree. I asked him for any suggestions seeing as he was the manager in the lighting department. He told me I should use incandescent bulbs for my plants... This was the MANAGER in the LIGHTING DEPARTMENT. Ugh.....
So what are your thoughts? Should I keep using them pointing down as thats my only option? Do you know something I don't? Because 7 dollars every1.5months is a bit much.
Thanks
Are you growing this tree for an ornamental? Because if it is not a grafted avocado, it is highly unlikely you will ever see any fruit from it. It also takes several years for a properly grafted avocado tree to even start to bear fruit. Also, do you know how large they can get? My wife lived in a house when we first met that had 2 avocado trees in the back yard and those things were at least 30 ft. tall with a canopy as wide as the tree was tall.
Your location is not conducive for growing them outdoors so you are stuck with an indoor plant in the winter months.
I don't have much experience with grow lights since I live in the deep south and can garden outside year round, so I really can't help you there.
Your location is not conducive for growing them outdoors so you are stuck with an indoor plant in the winter months.
I don't have much experience with grow lights since I live in the deep south and can garden outside year round, so I really can't help you there.
- rainbowgardener
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I think there's something wrong with your lamp and your information.
I have a lamp similar to this:
https://www.target.com/p/5-Head-Floor-Lamp-Includes-CFL-Bulb/-/A-12242007
with aim-able heads that I use for some supplemental lighting on some of the plants I bring in for the winter.
Most of the heads are aimed DOWN (though not straight down, in case that makes a difference). They all have CFL bulbs in them, the squiggly kind. I run the lights all day, most days, unless we happen to have a really sunny day, all through the late fall, winter, and early spring. Turn them off through the growing season. I have now turned the lights back on with the same bulbs in them I used last year, having never replaced any.
If anyone thinks bulbs wear out so much faster if they were straight down than angled down (doesn't really make sense to me, but I don't know), then try changing your set up.. The tree doesn't have to have light from directly above. It needs light on the top surface of the leaves, but that could be from above and to the side.
And no you can't use incandescent bulbs for your plants (as it sounds like you already know)... they give off too much heat, if they are close enough to the plant to make a difference in light, they will burn it up.
I have a lamp similar to this:
https://www.target.com/p/5-Head-Floor-Lamp-Includes-CFL-Bulb/-/A-12242007
with aim-able heads that I use for some supplemental lighting on some of the plants I bring in for the winter.
Most of the heads are aimed DOWN (though not straight down, in case that makes a difference). They all have CFL bulbs in them, the squiggly kind. I run the lights all day, most days, unless we happen to have a really sunny day, all through the late fall, winter, and early spring. Turn them off through the growing season. I have now turned the lights back on with the same bulbs in them I used last year, having never replaced any.
If anyone thinks bulbs wear out so much faster if they were straight down than angled down (doesn't really make sense to me, but I don't know), then try changing your set up.. The tree doesn't have to have light from directly above. It needs light on the top surface of the leaves, but that could be from above and to the side.
And no you can't use incandescent bulbs for your plants (as it sounds like you already know)... they give off too much heat, if they are close enough to the plant to make a difference in light, they will burn it up.
- rainbowgardener
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- Joined: Sun Feb 15, 2009 6:04 pm
- Location: TN/GA 7b
I was thinking about this some more. I have a bathroom light fixture over my mirror. Those bulbs point straight down and I haven't replaced any of them. They don't stay on all the time though, just when I'm in the bathroom.
I did some looking and found this:
https://www.terrapass.com/blog/posts/the-final-word
It does say:
it's preferable to keep the base of the bulb pointing downward (as in a standard table lamp)
because of heat collecting it sounds like. So it sounds like if there's a way to have your light fixture ventilated so it doesn't get hot around the base, it would extend the light of your bulbs. Is the lamp shade such that you can put some holes in it near the base of the bulb? Can you do without the shade?
I did some looking and found this:
https://www.terrapass.com/blog/posts/the-final-word
It does say:
it's preferable to keep the base of the bulb pointing downward (as in a standard table lamp)
because of heat collecting it sounds like. So it sounds like if there's a way to have your light fixture ventilated so it doesn't get hot around the base, it would extend the light of your bulbs. Is the lamp shade such that you can put some holes in it near the base of the bulb? Can you do without the shade?
- rainbowgardener
- Super Green Thumb
- Posts: 25279
- Joined: Sun Feb 15, 2009 6:04 pm
- Location: TN/GA 7b