Grow light suggestions

MMJ Mademoiselle

Active Member
I am completely knew to growing and am currently collecting the equipment required to start my grow. Currently wondering what lights people like to use for an organic soil grow. Thanks all!
 

zubey91

Well-Known Member
I am completely knew to growing and am currently collecting the equipment required to start my grow. Currently wondering what lights people like to use for an organic soil grow. Thanks all!

Hello,

i usually tell beginners to try to grow 1 plant from beginning to end before they try to do a crop. i also tell them to make it simple, grow in soil and use CFL's. they don't get as hot as HPS/MH, you don't need to worry about ducting and cooling......and you can produce some really good bud with them. and then each grow.. upgrade. but that is just me and how i do things.
 

MMJ Mademoiselle

Active Member
Lots of factors in choosing a light. How much space? How many plants do you need to grow? How much do you want to spend?
Its just a small closet space, I do not have exact measurements at this moment. Growing six girl scout cookies and I have no idea how much they even start at cost wise. A couple suggestions would be great. Thank you very much!
 

MMJ Mademoiselle

Active Member
Hello,

i usually tell beginners to try to grow 1 plant from beginning to end before they try to do a crop. i also tell them to make it simple, grow in soil and use CFL's. they don't get as hot as HPS/MH, you don't need to worry about ducting and cooling......and you can produce some really good bud with them. and then each grow.. upgrade. but that is just me and how i do things.
Cool! Thanks for the suggestions, I will definitely take them into account. What are "CFL's"?
 

420BongRips

Well-Known Member
It all depends on the space and size of your grow area, the number of plants, ventilation, and temperature.
If your going small, like 1-2 plants personal plants , start with cfl lights if the area is decently small then work your way up as you go.
If you are planning a bigger more expensive grow, then start big and go big throughout the whole grow.
 

az2000

Well-Known Member
Since your new at growing, try autoflowers. Smaller yield but good for beginners.
One downside to autos for new growers is that they're on a fixed lifespan. They don't recover from common newbie mistakes like overwatering.

On the other hand, I think that can be a subtle benefit too. Sometimes a new grower needs to let go and start over with what they learned from the first run at it. An auto makes that happen. So, the negative could be a positive.

The nice thing about an auto for a new grower is that they don't have to buy a tent. They can grow on a kitchen table (if they don't have odor concerns), see if they can grow before investing in a lot of equipment.
 
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