Do Plants Grow Better in Light or Dark?
This is a question that doesn’t have just one answer. Plants have a quality called photoperiodism, or a reaction to the amount of darkness they experience in a 24 hour period. Since the earth is tilted on its axis, the periods of daylight leading up to the winter solstice (around December 21st) get shorter and shorter, and then longer and longer leading up to the summer solstice (around June 21st). Plants can sense this change in light, and in fact, many base their yearly growing schedules around it. Some plants, like poinsettias and Christmas cacti, are short-day plants and will only bloom with long periods of darkness, making them popular as Christmas gifts. Most common garden vegetables and flowers, however, are long day plants, and will often go dormant in the winter, regardless of how warm they are kept.
Artificial Light vs. Sunlight
If you’re starting your seeds in March or February, the length and intensity of the sunlight is not going to be enough to make your seedlings grow. Even if you keep your house lights on every day, the light will be diffused throughout the room and the lack of intensity will make your seedling plants get leggy. Instead, buy a couple of grow lights and train them directly over your seedlings. Attach them to a timer set to 12 hours of light per day. The seedlings will thrive, thinking it’s later in the spring. That being said, plants do need some darkness to grow, so make sure the timer also turns the lights off.