I had an idea on how to heat my greenhouse and wanted to know what you all think.
I was going to get a pellet stove insert from a friend for free and started to brainstorm. I have a greenhouse that measures 24x64' and it has 17' high ceiling in the center. It is way to big to heat the whole thing so I had an idea on how to heat just some parts of it.
With the pellet stove I was thinking of making another room, inside the greenhouse, out of plastic and maybe a thermal blanket. I want to maybe put the plastic on some rafters that come across the greenhouse at 10' high and enclose a space that would be just for tomatoes about 8' wide and 64' long. Put the pellet stove in that area and see what I get at night. I would roll up the thermal blanket during the day and drop it at night. I could do the same thing above instead of using the plastic so I get a higher R-value.
Also if the thermal blanket idea would not get enough R-value I had another idea on using 2 pieces of plastic creating a air space. Then using a woodworking cyclone add static free peanuts to it creating a pocket of peanuts to make a high R-value filling in the walls and ceilings. Then in the daytime vacume it all back out to a large container or feed siloh.
Your thoughts.
Tags:
With my greenhouse being 1500 sq ft. I don't think small amounts of thermal mass will help. I have not filled my 2 1200 gallon fish tanks yet and also need to fill my rafts that will hold about 2600 gallons so I will have 5000 gallons of thermal mass and not sure what that might do.
That is why I was looking at the pellet stove and the smaller area to heat rather than the full greenhouse.
I also read on this forum that having a heated greenhouse would put a lot of condensation on the top plastic and create a lot of humidity. I am in such a dry climate I am not sure that this would hurt me at all but if anyone can add to this let me know.
From what I've read and experienced, it's the combination of high humidity and cool temperatures that allow fungal problems to grow out of control incredibly quickly. Towards the end of September here in Milwaukee we ran into a lot of powdery mildew on our tomato plants simply from closing up the greenhouses at night. Our greenhouses were not heated - we were just trying to extend our growing season a bit.
I'm not sure what your situation is, but if you're thinking about heating only part of your greenhouse with the pellet stove I would be a little concerned about the areas that will remain cool and will most likely have high humidity levels.
Joe Bifano said:
With my greenhouse being 1500 sq ft. I don't think small amounts of thermal mass will help. I have not filled my 2 1200 gallon fish tanks yet and also need to fill my rafts that will hold about 2600 gallons so I will have 5000 gallons of thermal mass and not sure what that might do.
That is why I was looking at the pellet stove and the smaller area to heat rather than the full greenhouse.
I also read on this forum that having a heated greenhouse would put a lot of condensation on the top plastic and create a lot of humidity. I am in such a dry climate I am not sure that this would hurt me at all but if anyone can add to this let me know.
© 2024 Created by Sylvia Bernstein. Powered by