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Indoor Hydroponics in Perforated Trays

I've tried lots of different hydroponics methods. While all of them work well, none of them addressed the exact needs that have. I want the following out of a hydroponics setup:

  • Inexpensive
  • Low maintanence
  • Easy to find parts at local stores
  • High yield
  • Leak proof for indoor use
  • Simple

Based on the above requirements I have devised a novel approach to growing hydroponics. The method that I came up works great for me. Here are my pea shoots planted using this method. If you haven't grown pea shoots for augmenting your salads then you're really missing out.

Pea Shoots
pea shoots
These 3 trays of pea shoots were enough to augment salads for two people during the winter. The PVC standoffs in this setup are much shorter than what I describe below, and I do not recommend making your standoffs short like this. Read on for more info about PVC standoffs.

I have gotten excellent yeilds on my pea shoots, lettuce, mesclun mix, and argula.

Arugula, Mesclin and Lettuce
lettuce in trays
Lettuce does very well in trays like this.

The thing that I really like about it is there are no leak points where you can make a mistake and accidentally water your carpet. The other thing that I like about it is the plants grow in a 11"x22" container, which is perfect for many grow lights, including 48" fluorescent tubes; I put 2 trays under 4 tubes and it's a perfect fit.

[pic of grow lights]

Black Plastic Trays

You'll want 2 kinds: seed starting and perforated. The seed starting trays are easy to find. They are usually about $1 each at your local nursery.

Here are the types of trays that you will need.
seed starting trays perforated trays
These are seed starting trays. They should be easy to find and cost about $1-$2 each. These are perforated trays. If you can't find something like this then just take a seed starting tray and poke at least 100 holes in it.

 

The second kind of tray might be kind of hard to find. I'm not sure what these are called, but plant trays is the name that comes to mind. If you can't find these at your local nursery then just take a seed starting tray and drill at least 100 holes in it.

PVC pipe

We need some spacers to hold the perforated trays above the seed starting trays. PVC pipe works nicely. You can use anything you want, but I like PVC pipe because it is cheap and easy to clean. It can be white, grey, black and it can be schedule 40 or 80. I like to use 1.5" pipe. Cut it into 1.5" long pieces, 6 per tray that you are going to setup.

PVC Pipe
pvc standoffs
This is an example of what your PVC pipe pieces should look like. I call these pieces standoffs. They should be roughly 1.5" long each.

In the end you are going to put the two trays together like this. But first we have to fill the perforated tray with media.

Final Assembly Example
pvc standoffs and perforated tray
Here is what the final assembly will be like.

Here is a shot of some young lettuce sprouts getting ready to take off.

Final Assembly Example
lettuce in pvc trays
Here is what the final assembly will be like.

Growing Media

I like to use a mix of coco coir and perlite. Anywhere from 50/50 to 75% coco 25% perlite will work. If you are using the General Hydroponics bricks (1 brick expands to 3-1/2 gallons), then plan on 1 brick per planting tray. Mix in perlite to fit. You can rehydrate the coco coir with a very diluted nutrient solution if you want to, but it's not at all necessary. In fact I've messed up more batches by mixing in nutes at the seedling stage than I can count. When in doubt, just start with plain tap water.

Coco coir - compressed Coco coir - expanded
coco coir compressed brick coco coir rehydrated
Coco coir comes as a compressed brick. Soak it in water to expand. Once it expands it's light and fluffy. This is one of the best media for hydroponics..

 

Perlite Coco-coir and perlite mix
bag of perlite coco coir and perlite mix
Perlite is available in a plastic bag at your local garden center. Mix the coco coir and perlite together and you have perfect media to grow in.

 

Putting It All Together

First off, make sure that everything plastic is clean. I usually wash with water and a scrubbie. I put about 2-3 gallons of water in a 5 gallon bucket and put in a small glug of bleach, and then I use the bleach water to wet everything. Then I thoroughly rinse the bleach water off.

Fill the perforated seed tray with your media. If you use coco coir it will not fall through the holes too much, but you might want to do this outside because it will be very wet and drippy. You don't have to pack the coco in there, just scoop handfuls and put it in looslely.

pic

Put the PVC pipe pieces in the seed starting tray on end like this:

Put one tray inside the other and you are ready to plant.

pic

Seeding

If I'm planting basil, lettuce, spinach, cillantro, chervil, parsley, chives or any other small to medium sized seed then I usually reserve about 2 handfuls of coco coir for covering my seeds with. If I'm planting peas for pea shoots then I reserve about 4 large handfuls.

I like to spread my seeds out about twice as dense as the manufacturer recomends, and then thin later.

pic

After spreading them out I put the remaining coco coir on top and pat it down.

pic

Then I water them well with a squirt bottle. Old dish soap bottles work great for this.

pic

Germination

Cover your seends with either plastic wrap, or a humidity dome sold for this purpose.

pic

Put them in a warm place to germinate, unless they are lettuce which likes it cold. I usually just put them under the grow lights set to 16 hours of light and forget about them for 3 to 5 days. You really won't have to do anything for about a week.

pic

After a week or two you will have seedlings popping up. Take of the humidity dome when they start to get their first set of true leaves.

pic

Care For Your Plants

After they have their first set of true leaves it's time to start feeding them. Up until now you most likely have not needed to water them at all because the humidity dome kept all of the water in. Use a quality hydroponic fertilizer such as Pure Blend Pro Grow mixed at the rate listed on the bottle.

You will not have to water that often at first, maybe once per week. After a couple of months you may have to water every 3 days. One of the great things about this method is if you over water it just drains down into the pan below instead of drowning the roots. Eventually your roots will grow down in to the pan and use that water up furthur extending the time between watering.

pea shoot roots

If you want to go 2 weeks without watering then put an aquarium airstone in the bottom tray and fill it up with nutrient solution (only after the roots have grown that far).

I hope that you get a chance to try this method of growing. It has really been great for me. Let me know if you have any suggestions on how to make this method better. You can get ahold of me here: jason (at) efundies.com

 

 
Saturday, 04-Feb-2012 16:07:30 PST