ThirdHyeOpen
Active Member
soil grows, im refering to.
The roots dont need to actually come out, just be exposed to the air-barrier, like in the fabric Smart Pots, for the air-pruning effect to be beneficial.after seeing the one pic you had of the party cup with holes in it for air pruning..i gave it a try...the haze i have now was my first test subject...i only had maybe 2mm of root come out the holes...which i would snip off...and holy fuck did it help...i transplanted the haze into a 1 gallon bucket...2 days after transplanting it...i had roots all over the bottom of the bucket (bottom is clear) now the roots are everywhere in the bucket...i dont see any reason to slice the roots doing it this way...they seem to explode after transplant
Here are the 3.5ga pails I made the other day with aluminum mesh:However you do it, it's definitely impressive to me how much easier they take to transplanting. There's a pic or 2 in the thread of what happens after a couple days in a new container, root-splosion. Instead of rootbound, they just get dense, developing hundreds of little side roots that take off when they hit open medium again. I hear good things about the smart pots, a friend of mine uses em and says his girls love it. The black mesh sounds like a winner, too.
I think that if you left your cover bucket intact (no drainage holes) and ran a wick through your soil and out through the holes in the bottom of the air pruning bucket into water in the cover bucket, you could maintain a small reservoir. I didn't watch the video on the site you showed me, just read the article, so I may be missing something. Purely speculation on my part, I've never used any kind of wick system. I'd keep an eye out for stagnation, algae, etc.I was really hoping that I could get those two styles of buckets to work as one but I'm not really sure how to make that happen