Light requirements
How much light does Sea Wormwood (Artemisia maritima) need?
Also called Sea Wormwood, Old Warrior, Seriphium.
More about sea wormwood
About Sea Wormwood
Artemisia maritima · also called Sea Wormwood, Old Warrior · herb
Sea Wormwood is a compact, woody-based aromatic perennial native to European salt marshes and coastal cliffs. It produces silvery, finely cut foliage with a strong, pungent scent. Exceptional salt, wind, and drought tolerance makes it ideal for coastal gardens and gravel beds. Historically used to flavour vermouth and in herbal medicine.
Comfort temperature: -20°C to 35°C
Watch for — Leggy growth: Without annual trimming, plants become open and woody at the base. Clip by one-third in early spring before new growth and again lightly after flowering to keep a neat dome.
The exact light sea wormwood needs
Sea Wormwood is a sun-driven crop — yield is directly limited by how much direct sun it gets, so this is one plant where "more light, more harvest" is literally true.
Put a number on it — this is what a meter (or a free phone light-meter app) should read where sea wormwood sits:
- Footcandles: Outdoor full sun is ~5,000–10,000+ fc; far beyond anything a windowsill provides.
- Lux: Tens of thousands of lux in open sun — orders of magnitude more than typical indoor light.
- Duration: Target 6–8 hours of direct sun a day through the growing season.
In plain terms, Full sun outdoors: an open spot that gets 6–8 hours of unobstructed direct sun, ideally including midday. Indoors or on a windowsill it needs the brightest south-facing position you have and usually still benefits from a grow light. Shaded beds, north-facing walls, and gappy "dappled" light — these grow lush leaves but little or poor-quality crop.
Not sure how to read the light in your home? Our light meter guide walks through measuring footcandles and lux with a free phone app and turning the reading into a placement decision for sea wormwood.
Signs sea wormwood is getting too much light
The most exposed leaves show it first. For sea wormwood specifically, watch for:
- In extreme heat plus intense sun, leaf scorch or sunscald on exposed fruit — usually a heat/water-stress combination rather than light alone; mulch and steady watering fix most of it.
- Wilting in the fiercest afternoon sun that recovers by evening — sea wormwood is photosynthesising hard, not over-lit; keep it watered.
- Bolting (premature flowering) in leafy crops is triggered more by heat and daylength than raw light intensity.
Light damage does not heal — a scorched leaf stays scorched — so the fix is to move sea wormwood out of the harsh light rather than wait for it to recover.
Signs sea wormwood is not getting enough light
Too little light is slower and sneakier than too much. The classic tell is etiolation: the plant stretches and pales as it reaches for a window. For sea wormwood, look for:
- Tall, pale, leggy, floppy sea wormwood reaching for the light, with thin stems that flop — classic shade etiolation.
- Poor flowering and a small, late, disappointing or non-existent harvest — the clearest sign it is under-lit.
- Lush dark leaves but few fruit; soft growth that pests and disease find easily.
If sea wormwood is stretched, leggy and pale, our guide to leggy, stretched plants covers how to fix it and whether it can be pruned back into shape. Tucking sea wormwood into a part-shade corner and expecting a full crop. Leafy growth tolerates some shade, but fruit, roots and flavour are paid for in hours of direct sun — short the light and you short the harvest.
Where to put sea wormwood: the best window and room
Give sea wormwood the sunniest open ground or the largest container in the brightest spot you have. A south-facing wall, allotment in the open, or unshaded raised bed is ideal. If you are growing it indoors or on a balcony, a full-spectrum grow light is usually not optional but essential — a windowsill alone rarely ripens a sun crop well.
- Pick the sunniest position. Site sea wormwood where it gets 6–8 hours of direct sun — open ground or the brightest container spot, away from walls and tree shade.
- Track the sun across the season. A spot sunny in May can be shaded by a leafed-out tree or low autumn sun later. Watch where the shadows actually fall before committing.
- Add a grow light indoors. Growing sea wormwood inside or on a windowsill? Run a strong full-spectrum LED 12–16 hours a day — windowsill light alone rarely crops well.
- Mulch and water to handle the heat. Full sun comes with heat stress; mulch and consistent watering prevent the scorch and bolting that sun gets blamed for.
Does sea wormwood need a grow light?
For indoor or windowsill growing, sea wormwood almost always needs a grow light to crop properly: a strong full-spectrum LED run 12–16 hours a day, positioned close. Light is the single biggest limiting factor for a sun crop grown inside — soil and water can be perfect and it will still fail in dim light.
The seasonal light shift (why winter changes everything)
Sea Wormwood is a growing-season crop. Outdoors, plant it so its main growth lands in the long, high-sun months — light and warmth fall away fast from autumn. For year-round indoor growing you must replace the lost winter sun with a grow light on a timer; the natural window light from October to February is far too weak for cropping.
Light and watering are linked: a plant in weaker winter light photosynthesises and drinks far less, so the same routine that worked in summer can rot it. See how often to water sea wormwood for the season-by-season schedule that pairs with this light plan.
Sea Wormwood light requirements — frequently asked questions
How much light does sea wormwood need?
Sea Wormwood needs Outdoor full sun is ~5,000–10,000+ fc; far beyond anything a windowsill provides. Tens of thousands of lux in open sun — orders of magnitude more than typical indoor light. Full sun outdoors: an open spot that gets 6–8 hours of unobstructed direct sun, ideally including midday. Indoors or on a windowsill it needs the brightest south-facing position you have and usually still benefits from a grow light.
Can sea wormwood survive in low light?
No, not really. Sea Wormwood is a sun lover — in low light it etiolates: it stretches, pales, weakens and slows right down. It will not instantly die, but it steadily declines and never looks its best.
What are the signs sea wormwood is getting too much light?
In extreme heat plus intense sun, leaf scorch or sunscald on exposed fruit — usually a heat/water-stress combination rather than light alone; mulch and steady watering fix most of it. Wilting in the fiercest afternoon sun that recovers by evening — sea wormwood is photosynthesising hard, not over-lit; keep it watered. Bolting (premature flowering) in leafy crops is triggered more by heat and daylength than raw light intensity. Tucking sea wormwood into a part-shade corner and expecting a full crop. Leafy growth tolerates some shade, but fruit, roots and flavour are paid for in hours of direct sun — short the light and you short the harvest.
What are the signs sea wormwood is not getting enough light?
Tall, pale, leggy, floppy sea wormwood reaching for the light, with thin stems that flop — classic shade etiolation. Poor flowering and a small, late, disappointing or non-existent harvest — the clearest sign it is under-lit. Lush dark leaves but few fruit; soft growth that pests and disease find easily. If you see this, move sea wormwood closer to the light or add a grow light — and check our guide on leggy, stretched plants.
Does sea wormwood need a grow light?
For indoor or windowsill growing, sea wormwood almost always needs a grow light to crop properly: a strong full-spectrum LED run 12–16 hours a day, positioned close. Light is the single biggest limiting factor for a sun crop grown inside — soil and water can be perfect and it will still fail in dim light.
Keep reading
- Sea Wormwood care — the full brief (light, water, soil, problems, pet safety)
- How often to water sea wormwood — the watering schedule
- Light meter guide — measure footcandles and lux with a free phone app
- Leggy, stretched plants — why it happens and how to fix it
- Best low-light plants — what actually survives a dim room
- Plants for north-facing windows — what thrives with no direct sun
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