July 26, 2012

Indoor House Plant Lighting Definitions


I find it hard at times to determine what is the right amount of lights for my plants. Tags say direct light, bright light but not direct etc. and I find it all, well a little nondescript so I thought I'd do a little research and this info is great. I find it really explains it well and gives you a great idea of how to really take care of your plants. 

What is a sunny (direct sun) location?
Within 2 feet of a south- or southwest-facing window.
Window sills flooded with sunlight.
A sun room (If you have one, lucky you!)

What is a bright (indirect sun) location?
Within 4-5 feet of an east- or west-facing window.
3-5 feet from a window that faces south or southwest.
Any place where the sun shines into a room for several hours.

What is a partially shaded (low light) location?
An east-facing window where the morning sun shines into the room for only a few hours. Morning sun is cooler than afternoon sun, so you don't have to worry about overheating your plant.
At least 3-5 feet away from a window that faces south or southwest.
Directly in front of a north-facing window gives a plant low-to-medium light intensity.

What is a shady location?
More than 6 feet away from a south- or southwest-facing window.
Hallways, staircases, and corners of rooms.
Near windows that are shaded by trees.

Source

2 comments:

  1. I feel that direct sunlight means more than 6 hours of sunlight wihle shade is 2-3 hours or less of sunlight. This is how we plant stuff in our yard which was a task trying to map out where the sun is as the year progresses and the position of the sun slightly changes.

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  2. the sun light definitions are different from house plants to outdoor plants, but ya, i agree with you for what you say about the outdoor plants, that totally right, and that's what i do too! :)

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