Here is a bit of what I'm doing:
I've got 3 shelves of an old unit I built many years ago. Shelf 1 and 3 uses a fantastic lighting setup that I first heard about here a few months ago that had a link to a you tube video. It uses a furnace vent piece and 2 x 100 watt 5000K daylight CFL bulbs. These bulbs use only 23 watts each and are cool and really bright. They run 14 hours a day and I'm getting wonderful results. The cost for the 2 were about $40.00 including the bulbs, furnace piece, 1/4" threaded rods, light fixtures and all. I used some mylar that I had lying around my studio but even some aluminum foil will bring a tremendous bounce of light back to the plants. The middle shelf has a 2' T5 "plant light" that I bought at Lowes for $49.99 a few years ago and they included the bulbs. It fits nicely in the unit and the plants love it. Really nice, with terrific results, but you get more bang for the buck with 4' units
This is my old tried and true setup for the last 5 years or so. 3 x 4' , 2 bulb florescent lights with daylight 5000K T12 bulbs. Excellent results from this and the plants really like that it is low heat, bright and a good color spectrum. The fixtures are about $11.00 each and the bulbs are another $4.00. Easy to use and can't go wrong.
Here are a few of the Godfather plants I've been trialing. They are fantastic rooters and growers and are less than 2 months old and doing really well. This is a real winner. I wanted to trial him before I set him free.
Stay tuned on this one.
Here are the cloners. I am trialing my homemade version before I use the Turbo Clone later this month. Also using the same lighting setup as before and this seems to be doing well so far.
However, I am still a huge fan of Coco Coir and Long Sphagnum Moss, just slightly damp in tupperware containers. Ive been doing this for the last 5 years or so and is still a great way to root. Here they are in my furnace room sweating away.
Its still a bit early here in NJ zone 7a , so there is still a lot of room for more plants. Most of my cuttings will be going into action at the end of this month. I found that rooting too many too soon is more of a hassle than its worth.
Many more to come.
Hope you all enjoyed this.