rick
Active member
With the clocks just about to go back and keen not to expose the hens to lights that will mess up a natural rest from laying I've been reading a lot of commercial lighting documents (mostly Hy-line and Once.) Finding it very humorous (in a geeky sort of way) that 'Lux', that is the human unit of luminescence, is converted to 'cLux' by the industry due to the chickens wider spectral sensitivity to light.
Anyway, it seems that narrow band green light (green light emitting diodes, typically at about 515 to 525nm) is well short of the red light wavelengths (>570nm) (natural daylight and just about any sort of 'white' artificial light) that easily passes through their skulls to the hypothalamus and is responsible for egg laying hormone production. Apparently, in sheds, they hang lights to produce just 30 Lux at feeder height (for 16 hours a day) - that’s not much more than a few candles worth by my reckoning but more than enough to keep them in lay!
Going to give the green light a try in the evenings. Seems to be common to use green and blue with broilers to keep them calm (carefully as what we see as a blue glimmer is a blaring beacon to them hence the use of a cLux meter!)
I am expecting, though, that pure green light is going to be pretty awful to see by!
Anyway, it seems that narrow band green light (green light emitting diodes, typically at about 515 to 525nm) is well short of the red light wavelengths (>570nm) (natural daylight and just about any sort of 'white' artificial light) that easily passes through their skulls to the hypothalamus and is responsible for egg laying hormone production. Apparently, in sheds, they hang lights to produce just 30 Lux at feeder height (for 16 hours a day) - that’s not much more than a few candles worth by my reckoning but more than enough to keep them in lay!
Going to give the green light a try in the evenings. Seems to be common to use green and blue with broilers to keep them calm (carefully as what we see as a blue glimmer is a blaring beacon to them hence the use of a cLux meter!)
I am expecting, though, that pure green light is going to be pretty awful to see by!