It's all about starting plants from seed and then taking them out to the garden to be planted. The proof is in the grow! Your garden may not be the same as ours, but these lights get seedling greens moving up toward the light and the roots down into the soil. 4,000 Kelvin is not flexible if you are looking for a full term grow. (microgreens love the lights and all other plant starts we have tired as well, the indoor plant starts have been amazing without the cost of operating metal halide lights.) We have been looking for lights that can perform in this particular way for over 6 years, it has been a struggle for sure.
@@thehillbillyfarmers Your plants look leggy and bleached...I've been growing plants for decades, you need 4500Lumen and 5000 Kelvin to mimick daylight.
Check out the previous video for more information: ruclips.net/video/zj5PjZ0ZOh4/видео.html
4000 Kelvin is not enough, you want something that is more flexible.
It's all about starting plants from seed and then taking them out to the garden to be planted. The proof is in the grow! Your garden may not be the same as ours, but these lights get seedling greens moving up toward the light and the roots down into the soil. 4,000 Kelvin is not flexible if you are looking for a full term grow. (microgreens love the lights and all other plant starts we have tired as well, the indoor plant starts have been amazing without the cost of operating metal halide lights.) We have been looking for lights that can perform in this particular way for over 6 years, it has been a struggle for sure.
@@thehillbillyfarmers Your plants look leggy and bleached...I've been growing plants for decades, you need 4500Lumen and 5000 Kelvin to mimick daylight.
@@tannenbaumgirl3100 They are microgreens 🤣