Looking to catagorize my grow setup looking for help.

kngblnk

Member
Hello,
I have this weird grow setup and i don't know if there is a name for it or not. I am using 3 gallon pots. Filled with
soil (the one with the fish on it, most popular one made by happy frog i believe). 400 watt HPS/MH bulb to light up the plants. This is indoor by the way. I currently have 3 plants in there now they are on a 2 x 2 propagation tray. I fill the water in the propagation tray to about 3 inches above the bottom of the pots. And I keep the water oxygenated with air stones and a commercial air pump. My friend says i should patent it. I'm not sure how you would catagorize the way i am growing them. Thanks for reading this and possibly posting.
 

Semper.Fi

Well-Known Member
How are the plants looking dude?

Interesting sort of soil / DWC / flood n not drain crossover eh??? ;)



~_
 

sno capz

Well-Known Member
Just sounds like you are using the wrong medium for a DWC setup... 3 inches above bottom of the pots? Sound like potential root rot... The water is oxygenated but the soil will hold that water... Sounds like a problem waiting to happen
 

WeedFreak78

Well-Known Member
So you have soil in pots in a tray with water in it? I don't get why you think this is a special way of doing anything? You're just watering from the bottom rather than the top.
 

Semper.Fi

Well-Known Member
There's water permanently in the tray being aerated though . . .

I wonder how they are looking?? Be interested to see if there was enough dissolved O2 in the water to keep them alive whilst drowning . . . .

So you have soil in pots in a tray with water in it? I don't get why you think this is a special way of doing anything? You're just watering from the bottom rather than the top.

~_
 

WeedFreak78

Well-Known Member
There's water permanently in the tray being aerated though . . .

I wonder how they are looking?? Be interested to see if there was enough dissolved O2 in the water to keep them alive whilst drowning . . . .




~_
What the OP is doing nothing new. The lower roots in a root ball can sit submerged in water without issue, even non-aerated water. As long as the top 1/4-1/3 can dry out, it'll get all the O2 it needs. I have outdoor plants in trays that i keep filled with water and they get filled when it rains and stay full for days after..no air, they are fine. I'm not saying don't do it, just it's nothing special.
 

Semper.Fi

Well-Known Member
Can't argue with that bro . . . . good info . . . . ;)

What the OP is doing nothing new. The lower roots in a root ball can sit submerged in water without issue, even non-aerated water. As long as the top 1/4-1/3 can dry out, it'll get all the O2 it needs. I have outdoor plants in trays that i keep filled with water and they get filled when it rains and stay full for days after..no air, they are fine. I'm not saying don't do it, just it's nothing special.


~_
 

517BlckBerry

Well-Known Member
Nature does this naturally in some specific areas. Nature has grown plants in every way imaginable. The best I've found though is just simple good old fashion ways with modern structures/vibrations and sequences that are now rare in nature or non existent.
 
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