greasemonkeymann
Well-Known Member
the key is to match the types of aeration to the mix/growing environment, in other words, with humus heavy mixes, sand and perlite do better, in drier or peat based mixes (or higher grow room temps), vermiculite, pumice, and more water retaining aeration is needed, reason being peat's tendency to create surface tension when it dries.Them roots need O water forces out air & the flow brings in fresh Oxygen
But more drainage means more water so it striking the balance is the sweet spot
Sorta the reason I prefer compost to vermicompost, wormcastings are DENSE, especially if made from fruitbased worm food
but pure compost is fairly dense too, and retains a LOT of water.
in the summer I add rotted tree-log chunks to help keep the mix moist (gets around 100 here sometimes)
but even the lights used, can create enough differences to warrant different types, and/or different amounts of aeration
an example is LEDs, they don't create nearly the heat that the sun or that HIDs do, so you want more water repelling aeration, like perlite, sand, etc.