Orchids Plant Care

Jump to content.

Search

We Recommend

  • Orchid Bulbs


  • For quality flower bulbs and perennial plants at rock bottom prices, go to Blooming Bulb
  • Quality plants at great prices, come see what we mean atDirect Gardening
  • Click here for $20 off your first order of $50 or more at Michigan Bulb!
  • Beautiful Perennials as low as $6.99 at Brecks Bulbs
  • Click here to save on orders at Gurney's Seed and Nursery
  • Visit America's Favorite Garden Center Since 1849 - Spring Hill Nursery
  • Free $20 off any order of $50 or more on flowers at Henry Fields!


  • Orchid Plant Gardens


  • Planters, pots and flower boxes for orchid plants at NewPro Containers
  • Indoor flower pots, planters and containers for home or office interiors at wholesale pricing with free shipping at Indoor Flower Pots


  • Orchid Plant Books












What Is A Foot-Candle?

Historically, light for plants has been rated in terms of foot-candles. Strictly speaking, a foot-candle is the amount of light cast by a candle 1 foot away.

Plants that adapt to low light will grow with only 100-300 foot-candles of light; those that need medium light need 300-600 foot-candles, while high-light plants need a minimum of 700-1,200 foot-candles. In the interest of comparison, sunlight at noon on a clear summer day is usually in excess of 10,000 foot-candles.

Your plants will usually let you know when they are receiving too little or too much light, but if you like, you can calculate foot-candles using a camera with a built-in light meter, focused on a white piece of paper in the spot you want to measure. If the camera shows an f-stop of f2-f4, with a slow shutter speed to match, the foot-candle rating is probably less than 400, or low light. An f-stop of about 5.6 with a shutter speed above 1/125 second suggests 400-600 foot-candles, or medium light. High light would give an f-stop of 8 or greater, which translates as more than 700 foot-candles.

You can also use the simple shadow test to evaluate light. When the shadow cast by your hand is barely discernible, the site receives low light. A well-defined shadow indicates moderate light, while a sharp, high-contrast shadow is created in high-light conditions.

RSS feed for comments on this post.

Leave a comment

You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>



Read more

« Orchid Virus Diseases
Easy Orchids - Cymbidium Beauport »