watchhowIdoit
New Member
You dont BOIL water and ingredients, you AERATE the mix. Boiling is for Earl Grey. Aeration is for bat shit......basically boiling something and using the water you boiled it in to water the plants with.
You dont BOIL water and ingredients, you AERATE the mix. Boiling is for Earl Grey. Aeration is for bat shit......basically boiling something and using the water you boiled it in to water the plants with.
ahhh back to my most favourite thread... heheheI am growing 7 plants in hydro in a 2x4 foot space. It is my first grow ever and I am only in the middle of my 3rd week. Hydro has been straight forward so far. Had a bad ppm meter and had nutes to high for about 3 days, and all I had to do was empty my 10 gal res and replace it with good ph water and let it run for a day and then I just started slowly adding back nutes until I got them back to where I needed them to be. Never had to spend more then 10 mins on any one thing since I put the plants in it. If I don't have to add water every 2 days then I am just looking at them grow in amazement every day. I can't compare soil vs hydro, but I can tell you that me having never grown anything before I am feeling pretty comfortable right now in my grow. I know I have tons of stuff to learn, but only spending minimal time on my garden I have more time to come in here and learn. I think both farmers have good ideals and knowledge and I can apply both sides as needed. PH and ppm's have been easy to maintain or fix so far. Thanks guys for all of your imput.
That reply rocked.Ive recently begun teaching a hydroponics class. Basically for yield size, grow time, ease of cloning, ease of watering. It uses much lesswater that a soil grow does. When it comes to space saving hydro can output anywhere from 6x -30x yield normally seen. It takes 33000 acres to grow 450 million tomatoes. It only takes 1200 acres of hydro. There are so many different set ups and styles that could suit any need. It can be near fully automated and can feed while away from the OP. you can mix nutes in less often but in larger amounts and have a huge reservoir that all the plants receive equal water from at the same time with the same pH. Soil offers a variable that I do not like. And that variable is in the soil. With hydro you know exactly what goes into it. Especially with 0ppm water. You have CONTROL over nearly all the big cannabis cultivation variables. Yes it costs more up front. Yes it may be scary to put together. But once it's done it's good to go with little adjustments forever. My dual tray 20 gal ebb n flow can support up to 12 girls in a sog setup in my 4x2x5. Before I could only fit two buckets of soil plants. I moved to hydro ebb n flow and my roommate is staying at soil. Until he saw my results. Now he is a hydro fiend too. If you have any questions about it you can pm me. I am working to set up a hydro rolling classroom that may be able to out put 576-2,000 rooted plants/clones/seedlings for up to five community gardens this year alone. All originated through a simple double res system that could fit in a small closet. Less bud quality comes into play when people automate the absolute shit out of their system an the begin to neglect the Keep it simple principle. Ebb n flow is nice because you can isolate a plant that isn't doing well and reposition the others into the tray better giving them more space f the sick one doesn't make it. Seriously pm me and I'll send you in the best direction I know. I fucking love hydro for cannabis and for its community applications and sustainability. It's the future of farming especially on large scale.