Tags:
Hi All,
Do you all think that the average 20 min. cycle time is good for root crop? I've no experience here, never grew any(except tomatoes), and would like to learn.
Harold my cycle is about 20 min give or take a few. I will say at 11 weeks my onions and garlic are the size of a silver dollar. You definitely need to grow these to go with tomatoes and peppers. How else are you going to make salsa. hehe.
Harold Sukhbir said:Hi All,
Do you all think that the average 20 min. cycle time is good for root crop? I've no experience here, never grew any(except tomatoes), and would like to learn.
Hi,
Thanks David. OK, will keep the salsa in mind.
Kobus, think the sand will be too damp for these?
I don't think so Harold, but I am trying the longer dry intervals just to start with. The sand deeper down stays pretty damp most of the time, but will not be any wetter than a flood and drain media bed. I have shoved all manner of things into the sand bed - tomato seedling, lettuce seeds, swiss chard seeds, chalottes, beets, carrots, strawberries........
All seem to be doing OK so far.
Harold Sukhbir said:
Hi,
Thanks David. OK, will keep the salsa in mind.
Kobus, think the sand will be too damp for these?
Hi All,
Do you all think that the average 20 min. cycle time is good for root crop? I've no experience here, never grew any(except tomatoes), and would like to learn.
Hi David,
Yes very impressive!
From walla to "voila" in just 12 weeks!
My systems. Big system media is a mix of 1/2" brown river rock (mostly quartz type rocks that don't affect pH) and shells (I don't recommend the shells but I've still done OK since they only buffer up to 7.6 rather than above 8 the way most limestone will.) I've grown carrots, beets, onions and turnips nicely and radish grows well too though we don't eat much of it. I've also grown sweet potato and jicama in that system. Make sure the get the jicama out before it gets cold and starts to rot, it needs a really long season though and can take over the world as tropical vines are want to do, the foliage and been pods of jicama are supposedly poisonous so you are only growing it for the roots that I've had get anywhere from baseball size up to basketball size.
The 300 gallon system has the brown river rock but no shells. Turnips, onions, radish, beets, and carrots all did great. I have not tried the sweet potatoes or jicama in that system at this time but see not reason that they wouldn't do fine.
I have not yet tried peanuts in aquaponics. I don't know if the plants would be able to peg the flowers in gravel so this might be appropriate to a sand bed. Perhaps I should try it this season though since I haven't planted any peanuts yet.
© 2024 Created by Sylvia Bernstein. Powered by