salterwobchak
Member
Alright people, new grower here. First off I'd like to thank everyone on this forum for helping me gather lots of useful information for my first grow, which I am going to attempt very soon.
I'll be growing 7-9 plants under a 600w hps and 300w led combo in homemade organic soil mix/smart pots.
I am wondering what I should put underneath my smart pots to help with drainage?
I seem to be finding conflicting information - some people say they are fine just on the floor soaking the water back up, some people say you should get rid of excess water to help them dry out a bit before watering again. I'm inclined to think the latter is true, but may be wrong.
I was thinking of setting up something like this:
https://www.rollitup.org/grow-room-design-setup/378720-diy-drip-tray-soil-grows.html
Is this a good idea?
Would metal sheeting definitely be ok? I have heard that it can act as a radiator for heat. I have and electric tube heater to use in my grow tent (with thermostat to help control heat, my 600w is air cooled and I live in a cold area) which I was planning on putting somewhere in the bottom of my grow room as heat rises... However I feel if I do this with the smart pots on the metal sheeting, then the heat could radiate off the sheeting and make the plants too hot? Will this even matter though if the heater is set at the correct temperature?
The other corrugated roofing I can find where I live is made of pvc which I have heard is bad to put in a grow room?
Thats the method I was planning on doing anyway as it looks pretty effective, and ideally I would like to be able to water my plants and dispose of the excess water later. It would be nice if someone could chime in on whether I will be OK with the metal sheeting or whether there are other good alternatives.
What do all you indoor smart pot users do?
Any other advice you can give to someone attempting their first grow would be appreciated also.
I'm looking forward to the learning process, but I want to do everything as well as I can and hopefully get a good first grow too.
I've got some nice seeds and if all goes to plan I may post the results here later..
Thanks!
I'll be growing 7-9 plants under a 600w hps and 300w led combo in homemade organic soil mix/smart pots.
I am wondering what I should put underneath my smart pots to help with drainage?
I seem to be finding conflicting information - some people say they are fine just on the floor soaking the water back up, some people say you should get rid of excess water to help them dry out a bit before watering again. I'm inclined to think the latter is true, but may be wrong.
I was thinking of setting up something like this:
https://www.rollitup.org/grow-room-design-setup/378720-diy-drip-tray-soil-grows.html
Is this a good idea?
Would metal sheeting definitely be ok? I have heard that it can act as a radiator for heat. I have and electric tube heater to use in my grow tent (with thermostat to help control heat, my 600w is air cooled and I live in a cold area) which I was planning on putting somewhere in the bottom of my grow room as heat rises... However I feel if I do this with the smart pots on the metal sheeting, then the heat could radiate off the sheeting and make the plants too hot? Will this even matter though if the heater is set at the correct temperature?
The other corrugated roofing I can find where I live is made of pvc which I have heard is bad to put in a grow room?
Thats the method I was planning on doing anyway as it looks pretty effective, and ideally I would like to be able to water my plants and dispose of the excess water later. It would be nice if someone could chime in on whether I will be OK with the metal sheeting or whether there are other good alternatives.
What do all you indoor smart pot users do?
Any other advice you can give to someone attempting their first grow would be appreciated also.
I'm looking forward to the learning process, but I want to do everything as well as I can and hopefully get a good first grow too.
I've got some nice seeds and if all goes to plan I may post the results here later..
Thanks!
