HYDROPONICS- Cannabis Marijuana seeds Growing Guide
Most growers report that a hydroponic system will grow
plants faster than a soil medium, given the same genetics and
environmental conditions. This may be due to closer attention
and more control of nutrients, and more access to oxygen. The
plants can breath easier, and therefor, take less time to
grow. One report has it that plants started in soil matured
after hydroponic plants started 2 weeks later!
Fast growth allows for earlier maturation and shorter total
growing time per crop. Also, with soil mixtures, plant growth
tends to slow when the plants become root-bound. Hydroponics
provides even, rapid growth with no pauses for transplant
shock and eliminates the labor/materials of repotting if
rockwool is used. (Highly recommended!)
By far the easiest hydroponic systems to use are the wick
and reservoir systems. These are referred to as Passive
Hydroponic methods, because they require no water distribution
system on an active scale (pump, drain, flow meter and path).
The basis of these systems is that water will wick to where
you want it if the medium and conditions are correct.
The wick system is more involved than the reservoir system,
since the wicks must be cut and placed in the pots, correct
holes must be cut in the pots, and a spacer must be created to
place the plants up above the water reservoir below. This can
be as simple as two buckets, one fit inside the other, or a
kiddie pool with bricks in it that the pots rest on, elevating
them out of the nutrient solution.
I find the wick setup to be more work than the reservoir
system. Initial setup is a pain with wicks, and the plants sit
higher in the room, taking up precious vertical space. The
base the pot sits on may not be very stable compared to a
reservoir system, and a knocked over plant will never be the
same as an untouched plant, due to stress and shock in
recovery.
The reservoir system needs only a good medium suited to the
task, and a pan to sit a pot in. If rockwool slabs are used, a
half slab of 12" rockwool fits perfectly into a kitty litter
pan. The roots spread out in very desirable horizontal fashion
and have a lot of room to grow. Plants grown in this manner
are very robust because they get a great deal of oxygen at the
roots. Plants grown with reservoir hydroponics grow at about
the same rate as wicks or other active hydroponic methods,
with much less effort required, since it is by far the
simplest of hydroponic methods. Plants can be watered and feed
by merely pouring solution into the reservoir every few days.
The pans take up very little vertical space and are easy to
handle and move around.
In a traditional hydroponic method, pots are filled with
lava/ vermiculite mix of 4 to 1. Dolite Lime is added, one
Tblspn. per gallon of growing medium. This medium will wick
and store water, but has excellent drainage and air storage
capacity as well. It is however, not very resuable, as it is
difficult to recapture and sterilize after harvest. Use small
size lava, 3/8" pea size, and rinse the dust off it, over and
over, until most of it is gone. Wet the vermiculite (dangerous
dry, wear a mask) and mix into pots. Square pots hold more
than round. Vermiculite will settle to bottom after repeated
watering from the top, so only water from the top occasionally
to leach any mineral deposits, and put more vermiculite on the
top than the bottom. Punch holes in the bottom of the pots,
and add water to the pan. It will be wicked up to the roots
and the plants will have all they need to flourish.
The reservoir is filled with 1 1/2 - 3 inches of water and
allowed to recede between waterings. When possible, use less
solution and water more often, to pull more oxygen to the
roots faster over time. If you go away on vacation, simply
fill the reservoirs full to the top, and the plants will be
watered for 2 weeks at least.
One really great hydroponic medium is Oasis floral foam.
Stick lots of holes into it to open it up a little, and start
plants/clones in it, moving the cube of foam to rockwool later
for larger growth stages. Many prefer floral foam, as it is
inert, and adds no PH factors. It is expensive though, and
tends to crumble easily. I am also not sure it is very
reusable, but it seems to be a popular item at the indoor
gardening centers.
Planting can be made easier with hydroponic mediums that
require little setup such as rockwool. Rockwool cubes can be
reused several times, and are premade to use for hydroponics.
Some advantages of rockwool are that it is impossible to over
water and there is no transplanting. Just place the plants
cube on top of a larger rockwool cube and enjoy your extra
leisure time.
Some find it best to save money by not buying rockwool and
spending time planting in soil or hydroponic mediums such as
vermiculite/lava mix. Pearlite is nice, since it is so light.
Pearlite can be used instead of or in addition to lava, which
must be rinsed and is much heavier.
But rockwool has many advantages that are not appreciated
until you spend hours repotting; take a second look. It is not
very expensive, and it is reusable. It is more stable than
floral foam, which crunches and powders easily. Rockwool holds
10 times more water than soil, yet is impossible to
over-water, because it always retains a high percentage of
air. Best of all, there is no transplanting; just place a
starter cube into a rockwool grow cube, and when the plant
gets very large, place that cube on a rockwool slab. Since
rockwool is easily reused over and over, the cost is divided
by 3 or 4 crops, and ends up costing no more than vermiculite
and lava, which is much more difficult to reclaim, sterilize
and reuse (repot) when compared to rockwool. Vermiculite is
also very dangerous when dry, and ends up getting in the
carpet and into the air when you touch it (even wet), since it
drys on the fingers and becomes airborne. For this reason, I
do not recommend vermiculite indoors.
Rockwool is disadvantages are relatively few. It is
alkaline PH, so you must use something in the nutrient
solution to make it acidic (5.5) so that it brings the
rockwool down from 7.7, to 6.5 (vinagar works great.) And it
is irritating to the skin when dry, but is not a problem when
wet.
To pre-treat rockwool for planting, soak it in a solution
of fish emulsion, trace mineral solution and phosphoresic acid
(PH Down) for 24 hours, then rinse. This will decrease the
need for PH worries later on, as it buffers the rockwool PH to
be fairly neutural.
Hydroponics should be used indoors or in greenhouses to
speed the growth of plants, so you have more bud in less time.
Hydroponics allows you to water the plants daily, and this
will speed growth. The main difference between hydroponics and
soil growing is that the hydroponic soil or "medium"is made to
hold moisture, but drain well, so that there are no
over-watering problems associated with continuous watering.
Also, hydroponically grown plants do not derive nutrients from
soil, but from the solution used to water the plants.
Hydroponics reduces worries about mineral buildup in soil, and
lack of oxygen to suffocating roots, so leaching is usually
not necessary with hydroponics.
Hydroponics allows you to use smaller containers for the
same given size plant, when compared to growing in soil. A 3/4
gallon pot can easily take a small hydroponically grown plant
to maturity. This would be difficult to do in soil, since
nutrients are soon used up and roots become cut-off from
oxygen as they become root-bound in soil. This problem does
not seem to occure nearly as quickly for hydroponic plants,
since the roots can still take up nutrients from the constant
solution feedings, and the medium passes on oxygen much more
redily when the roots become bound in the small container.
Plant food is administered with most waterings, and allows
the gardener to strictly control what nutrients are available
to the plants at the different stages of plant growth.
Watering can be automated to some degree with simple and cheap
drip system apparatus, so take advantage of this when
possible.
Hydroponics will hasten growing time, so it takes less time
to harvest after planting. It makes sense to use simple
passive hydroponic techniques when possible. Hydroponics may
not be desirable if your growing outdoors, unless you have a
greenhouse.
CAUTION: it is necessary keep close watch of plants to be
sure they are never allowed to dry too much when growing
hydroponically, or roots will be damaged. If you will not be
able to tend to the garden every day, be sure the pans are
filled enough to last until next time you return, or you can
easily lose your crop.
More traditional hydroponic methods (active) are not
discussed here. I don not see any point in making it more
diffucult than it needs to be. It is necessary to change the
solution every month if your circulating it with a pump, but
the reservoir system does away with this problem. Just rinse
the medium once a month or so to prevent salts build up by
watering from the top of the pot or rockwool cube with pure
water. Change plant foods often to avoid deficiencies in the
plants. I recommend using 2 different plant foods for each
phase of growth, or 4 foods total, to lessen chances of any
type of deficiency.
Change the solution more often if you notice the PH is
going down quickly (too acid). Due to cationic exchange,
solution will tend to get too acid over time, and this will
cause nutrients to become unavailable to the plants. Check PH
of the medium every time you water to be sure no PH issues are
occuring.
Algae will tend to grow on the medium with higher
humidities in hydroponics. It will turn a slab of rockwool
dark green. To prevent this, use the plastic cover the
rockwool came in to cover rockwool slab tops, with holes cut
for the plants to stick out of it. It is easy to cut a
packaged slab of rockwool into two pieces, then cut the end of
the plastic off each piece. You now have two pieces of slab,
each covered with plastic except on the very ends. Now cut 2
or 3 4" square holes in the top to place cubes on it, and
place each piece in a clean litter pan. Now your ready to
treat the rockwool as described above in anticipation of
planting.
If growing in pots, a layer of gravel at the top of a pot
may help reduce algae growth, since it will dry very quickly.
Algae is merely messy and unsightly; it will not actually
cause any complications with the plants.
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