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What do the roots look like? The health of the plant begins with the roots. In a raft situation it is easy to monitor the roots. Low DO and slimy roots are two common problems.
I also had experienced the same results...further research pointed to two reasons why:
o planted far too early as weather was not favorable for lettuce (that was an easy fix...silly me), and
o the two inch "Net Pots" (now "Slit Pots"), were not touching the water (2 inch raft), and there were no roots extending into the water. I had not given my lettuce seedlings time to develop any roots that extended below the pots.
Once fixed, great lettuce. I was never a big lettuce fan but after having tasted what has grown in the Aquaponics research fish farm (the the salad my wife prepared for me), I have got the "bug"
Good luck...
e
Chris Smith said:What do the roots look like? The health of the plant begins with the roots. In a raft situation it is easy to monitor the roots. Low DO and slimy roots are two common problems.
What is your system overall? A gravel bed system and the plants in the media bed are fine but the lettuce in the raft are not?
Since plants in a raft are getting lots more water and don't get the flood and drain, the water needs to have plenty of dissolved oxygen in it. Extra aeration is often beneficial for rafts.
Are the plants in the raft getting as much sun and air flow as the ones in the gravel beds?
Back when I had been doing hydroponics indoors. I would put a T5 4 lamp florescent fixture about an inch from touching the plants only worked well with all the plants about the same height.) I would move the fixture up as the plants grew until harvest. I grew some great salads that way while we lived in a little apartment.
I see you are using nft. How often do you clean the pipes. How many gallon a minute is the flow in the nft? I have 4 eight ft and know nothing about nft
Sahib Punjabi said:I also had experienced the same results...further research pointed to two reasons why:
o planted far too early as weather was not favorable for lettuce (that was an easy fix...silly me), and
o the two inch "Net Pots" (now "Slit Pots"), were not touching the water (2 inch raft), and there were no roots extending into the water. I had not given my lettuce seedlings time to develop any roots that extended below the pots.
Once fixed, great lettuce. I was never a big lettuce fan but after having tasted what has grown in the Aquaponics research fish farm (the the salad my wife prepared for me), I have got the "bug"
Good luck...
e
Chris Smith said:What do the roots look like? The health of the plant begins with the roots. In a raft situation it is easy to monitor the roots. Low DO and slimy roots are two common problems.
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