So I've been growing a bunch of different acacia's under a 150w UFO LED light.
At first I was pretty excited how growth rate performed in comparison to fluorescent lights...
..but I'm not convinced...
What I've noticed over the course of 3-4 months, is my acacia's don't grow vertically without being forced. I'm not sure yet whether they grow away from the LED (as if it
s too strong and trying to get away), or if it's following a particular band of light (I'll explain what I mean by this below)
To provide the whole "spectrum", there is a mix of different LED lights (red/blue/green).
I think the problem is that the LED's emits a straight band/line of light, the light spectrum range isn't dispersed around evenly like you get with fluorescent lights.
I've tried to mitigate the problem by cycling the propagation tubes around and rotating them, but not often enough.
I've even noticed the foliage growth is not very even - ie big phyllodes on one side, small phyllodes on the other.
I thought initially it was the particular trait of a.acuminata's, having a weak stem or something, but I'm pretty convinced now it's the poor way the LED handle light dispersion.
This may be a different story for a single plant, but it's not the best option (ime) for raising more than 2-3 under a single light.
On the other hand... EXCELLENT for growing warped looking bonzai's
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(409kb) downloaded 225 time(s).Throughout recorded time and long before, trees have stood as sentinels, wise yet silent, patiently accumulating their rings while the storms of history have raged around them --The living wisdom of trees, Fred Hageneder