Gary McCarthy
Chumono
For those of you in the Northeast, at what temps do you move your tropicals indoors for the fall and winter months?
Last year I did consistent night temps below 65. I did that with everything even deciduous. This year I may do 55 after reading all of your post for my ficus and 45 for deciduous. Normally I put the deciduous into the garage and ficus in the house, but are you all leaving ficus in an unheated garage also?
That's what I do too, I just wasn't sure if anyone else was doing something different lolYou don't want to leave the ficus in an unheated garage. All my ficus and trops come in the house where it is warm and stay under lights all winter.
I've never actually done a comparison study where I put some trees into shade and left others in full sun, so it's quite possible that what I'm doing makes no difference. I just know that I've read a lot of complaints from people about their trees dropping a lot of their leaves when they bring them inside, and my assumption has always been that it's because of the change in light intensity. I could be wrong about that but as I noted, I have very little leaf drop doing it this way. If you have several trees, maybe try it both ways and see if you notice a difference?Interesting notion of getting tropicals used to low light before bringing in. So if I have some Ficus on my full sun bench (all day sun, sunrise to sunset) and will be bringing them in to go under a Niello 45W LED grow light (easy to find on amazon) - would you guys think that moving them into partial shade until night temps are too low would do well at getting them ready to go under this light? Or would it be better to keep them in full sun and just bring them straight in under the light?