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What kind of thin plastic?
There are many tower methods out there.
I suspect that if the plastic is sturdy enough to support the media, plants and water, you will probably build up enough of an algae layer to probably protect the roots from light thought the algae will be steeling some of your nutrients.
Interesting thought. Algae seems to be the reason people give for exposed roots being a problem to begin with. I will be using the same material greenhouses are made with. 80ism light transparency.
TCLynx said:
What kind of thin plastic?
There are many tower methods out there.
I suspect that if the plastic is sturdy enough to support the media, plants and water, you will probably build up enough of an algae layer to probably protect the roots from light thought the algae will be steeling some of your nutrients.
Are you talking about greenhouse film or some sturdier plastic?
What sort of media would you use?
It sounds like you are doing a verticle bag system. Light does not harm roots that I know of. If you are doing this to save money, I suggest spending a bit more to get "Panda" film; an opaque plastic with white on one side and black on the other. I think a transparent bag system is looking for trouble. However I hesitate to comment coz I haven't tried it. In pure hydroponics, we try not to grow algae due to lost nutrients and oxygen depletion which may suffocate your plant/s . And depending on what type of media you use, you could find yourself not too satisfied because the bottom is always too wet while the tops too dry. The third point I'd like to refer you to is that thin plastic does not insulate the roots from the sun like solid PVC can and tends to collapse on itself, squeezing out any extra air.
Cheers
@ David W: I know about air pruning but light pruning?...really? I grew a monster bush type tomato that lived for almost four years straight out of a meter cube fish tank on my lawn. Snails, pacusamus (common sucker fish for cleaning tanks), mosquito fish and goldfish (carp) ate up a lot of algae to produce nutrients. The roots were exposed to sunlight.
Besides, I don't know of any way to grow bag columns without medium, esp. transparent medium. hehe...just ribbin ya.
Suspended with 3/4 inch plywood then straps from the ceiling as it got really big. I had to build a makeshift greenhouse around it as it got bigger. I don't have a pic of mine but I do have one from a consulting project. It was originally a very exhilarating example of AP. However it did turned out to be too difficult for them to manage so they took out the fish and used bricks and a tarp. So maybe light doesn't kill roots but maybe the algae could suffocate them or fish sucking at the roots may damage them?
That picture is amazing. One thing I love about this discipline is that there does not seem to be any limits. Everytime I hit a wall I simply innovate out of it. I am a EX-NASA guy who really needed a hobby.
Thanks for your replys,
Scott
Carey Ma said:
Suspended with 3/4 inch plywood then straps from the ceiling as it got really big. I had to build a makeshift greenhouse around it as it got bigger. I don't have a pic of mine but I do have one from a consulting project. It was originally a very exhilarating example of AP. However it did turned out to be too difficult for them to manage so they took out the fish and used bricks and a tarp. So maybe light doesn't kill roots but maybe the algae could suffocate them or fish sucking at the roots may damage them?
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