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Help....does anyone have a link to a (stateside) supplier of coir ? with a decent price and shipping costs ?
Thanks !
hi I was at a play ground the other day and saw that they were using old car tires chopped up into small peaces and gave the kids something soft to land in. I know that they have been using tires for artificial reefs for years. That lead me to think that they would be ok for my fish. I think they would work in my grow beds. Do you have any thoughts on this idea? Thank you Harrison
That would be around 1400 USD just for hydroton.
You might want to research Utelite (expanded shale) and Stalite (expanded slate). Either of these would have a much greater surface area than gravel and are lighter - cheaper than hydroton. There was some discussion of these media on the BYAP site.
I'm tentatively planning to try Stalite - PH neutral. It will be more expensive than gravel but I want the most surface area I can get in the grow beds and a textured surface greatly increases the surface area. More surface area should equal more bacteria.
I did use the stalite in a few stackers (mixed w/ the leftover chaff from coffee grounds). The plants seemed to have similar growth rate and it was cheaper. The chaff held the water a little better then just stalite on it's own but can't use too much, tends to get a little sticky..(the stackers were fed the AP water 3x a day and recirculates back).
I noticed all the large bottom pots on the vertical stacks that have stalite in them (those were mixed w/ coco coir) have ten strawberry plants each and none of those are producing, while all the other 400 or so strawberries are producing (only have coco ocir/lg perlite). Although, the variable on that could be the bottom pot only get fed after going through at top, may not be getting enough nutrients...could solve that by adding another feeder tube halfway down stack. I'll add more fish first before doing that. I have probably only around 175 fish (lost track) and LOTS of plants, so was happy to see the strawberries,tomatoes,peas producing. A couple of months ago, when system was still fairly new, borrowed a meter and it only read 550ppm...think strawberries need more then twice, will check again this week.
I also experimented with riverstone on one of the raft tanks and for some reason they didn't grow well. There were a lot of factors of why it may not have done well...I transplanted lettuce seedlings, they might have been too young, it was when it was hot still etc...although the transplanted in coco coir did well.
Michelle Silva said:
I found the stalite to be less expensive then gravel, but had already used coco coir in the system by the time I found the fairly local source to get it.
George J. Thurmon said:
That would be around 1400 USD just for hydroton.
You might want to research Utelite (expanded shale) and Stalite (expanded slate). Either of these would have a much greater surface area than gravel and are lighter - cheaper than hydroton. There was some discussion of these media on the BYAP site.
I'm tentatively planning to try Stalite - PH neutral. It will be more expensive than gravel but I want the most surface area I can get in the grow beds and a textured surface greatly increases the surface area. More surface area should equal more bacteria.
I did use the stalite in a few stackers (mixed w/ the leftover chaff from coffee grounds). The plants seemed to have similar growth rate and it was cheaper. The chaff held the water a little better then just stalite on it's own but can't use too much, tends to get a little sticky..(the stackers were fed the AP water 3x a day and recirculates back).
I noticed all the large bottom pots on the vertical stacks that have stalite in them (those were mixed w/ coco coir) have ten strawberry plants each and none of those are producing, while all the other 400 or so strawberries are producing (only have coco ocir/lg perlite). Although, the variable on that could be the bottom pot only get fed after going through at top, may not be getting enough nutrients...could solve that by adding another feeder tube halfway down stack. I'll add more fish first before doing that. I have probably only around 175 fish (lost track) and LOTS of plants, so was happy to see the strawberries,tomatoes,peas producing. A couple of months ago, when system was still fairly new, borrowed a meter and it only read 550ppm...think strawberries need more then twice, will check again this week.
I also experimented with riverstone on one of the raft tanks and for some reason they didn't grow well. There were a lot of factors of why it may not have done well...I transplanted lettuce seedlings, they might have been too young, it was when it was hot still etc...although the transplanted in coco coir did well.
Michelle Silva said:I found the stalite to be less expensive then gravel, but had already used coco coir in the system by the time I found the fairly local source to get it.
George J. Thurmon said:
That would be around 1400 USD just for hydroton.
You might want to research Utelite (expanded shale) and Stalite (expanded slate). Either of these would have a much greater surface area than gravel and are lighter - cheaper than hydroton. There was some discussion of these media on the BYAP site.
I'm tentatively planning to try Stalite - PH neutral. It will be more expensive than gravel but I want the most surface area I can get in the grow beds and a textured surface greatly increases the surface area. More surface area should equal more bacteria.
i dunno tires for playground us good idea or not , i have been to a tire chopping plant in jacksonvile florida and the chopped tires are full of sharp wires form the radial cord. probably ok for a driveway base but i would not want to be barefooted on it or fall down in it. only thing i have found good use for recycled tires is planting potatoes in and building earthship style structure.
i also think if done right 2 or 3 layers of tires set and filled with as much earth as they will take would make a fine above ground pond wall. you would have to check each one closely for snags of wire and nails but other tires could be skinned out
and used as caps for the voids in between each tire set. say you have a run of tires for retaining wall OOOOOOO cut out tire center and split the flap, use the flap ( i call them gators) to cover the voids in your tire wall run. just use flathead self drilling screws and it works great and goes quickly
but for media i dont think so , im still hopeful this plastic grid i made will work out , its old bread trays and milk crates tied together and then top dressed with standard media type rock. so far its looking good and i figure has cut my weight down
1000 pounds per bed. time will tell but for now all is well.
best regards , john
Harrison Wayne Griffith said:
hi I was at a play ground the other day and saw that they were using old car tires chopped up into small peaces and gave the kids something soft to land in. I know that they have been using tires for artificial reefs for years. That lead me to think that they would be ok for my fish. I think they would work in my grow beds. Do you have any thoughts on this idea? Thank you Harrison
I agree that tires are probably not a good idea for media. I understand they can leach a fair amount of heavy metals into the water.
The stuff used for playgrounds has been shredded and the metal taken out and then usually coated with something since naked tire material will make you very dirty or I should say make the kids very dirty. However, tires are very flammable and I know of at least one instance where an entire playground area went up in flames, at least no small children were present and the teens who were probably responsible for the sparking flame ran quick.
Thank you one and all I will not try it. The only reason I thought of it was to try to cut down the weight and it was something I could get local. I will have to go with river rock. I would like to use the expanded slate but can't find any local and shipping puts the cost up. Harrison
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