Aeroponic, Sweet Potato, hydroponic, NASA, Sweet Potato slip, Fogger, Fogponics, Fog,
This is a homemade Aeroponic system which I am trying to grow sweet potatoes in with no soil
Thursday, March 12, 2009
Day 113 - Pure Aero did not work so good!
I essentially almost killed all the plants when I went back to aero for a week. I switched them back to the hydro/aero set up and they look decent. still no sweet potatoes...
9 comments:
Anonymous
said...
Thanks for the update. I hope to see more about your project soon.
I have found growing to term with fog only to be very difficult. My theory is that while nutrient absorbtion is increased the small "seeker" hairs cannot supply enough hydration for the plant. The best way I have found is a mix of a light spray to the roots on a 15min /1hr schedule and the fog being supplied while the sprayers are off. I will also be trying an combination of eb/flow and fog. Also If you want to do a remote fog chamber you have to keep the supply line short or the nutrients will precipitate out of the fog. I also like to push the fog down (the way it likes to go naturally) rather than trying to blow it upwards with a fan.
A sweet potato cannot survive in a monoculture. You need the fungus and bacteria that live in the soil to provide nutrients to the roots. I'm sure you will be able to sustain growth with aeroponics, but I seriously doubt you will ever get a harvest.
Hey, I was reading a post a while ago. That you'd have a hard time growing sweet potatoes without the proper medium. I was reading you can use a mixture if Vermiculite, Perlite, and I believe Coco Coir. Supposedly these conditions provide the perfect medium (closest to actual soil) for growing sweet potatoes either with Hydro or Aquaponics.
How did the project go? did you actually get potato? i once read a patent for growing a potato hydroponically, it said you have to apply pressure to get the feeder roots to swell out into spuds, i wonder if this can be done using simple water falling onto the roots.
I would like to duplicate your system of blowing fog form one chamber to another. Can you tell me what type of fan you used, how it is mounted, and how the PVC is mounted to the totes?
Grow sweet potatoes using this indoor homemade Aeroponic system. No soil will be used, just water and hydroponic nutrients. The idea is to see If I can grow a sweet potato by just having the roots hanging in mid air while a nutrified mist is blown into the chamber. The roots pull water and nutrients from the mist and that should be good enough or even better than soil!
9 comments:
Thanks for the update. I hope to see more about your project soon.
Looks good, what kind of nutrient mix you using? Wondering if you need to cut back on the nitrogen to get some spuds
I have found growing to term with fog only to be very difficult. My theory is that while nutrient absorbtion is increased the small "seeker" hairs cannot supply enough hydration for the plant. The best way I have found is a mix of a light spray to the roots on a 15min /1hr schedule and the fog being supplied while the sprayers are off. I will also be trying an combination of eb/flow and fog. Also If you want to do a remote fog chamber you have to keep the supply line short or the nutrients will precipitate out of the fog. I also like to push the fog down (the way it likes to go naturally) rather than trying to blow it upwards with a fan.
www.myspace.com/urbanhydro
A sweet potato cannot survive in a monoculture. You need the fungus and bacteria that live in the soil to provide nutrients to the roots. I'm sure you will be able to sustain growth with aeroponics, but I seriously doubt you will ever get a harvest.
Any latest results on whether your plants gave potatoes or not?
I'd love to try it if it worked out...
Cheers!
Hey, I was reading a post a while ago. That you'd have a hard time growing sweet potatoes without the proper medium. I was reading you can use a mixture if Vermiculite, Perlite, and I believe Coco Coir. Supposedly these conditions provide the perfect medium (closest to actual soil) for growing sweet potatoes either with Hydro or Aquaponics.
How did the project go? did you actually get potato? i once read a patent for growing a potato hydroponically, it said you have to apply pressure to get the feeder roots to swell out into spuds, i wonder if this can be done using simple water falling onto the roots.
I would like to duplicate your system of blowing fog form one chamber to another. Can you tell me what type of fan you used, how it is mounted, and how the PVC is mounted to the totes?
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