Hi there,
I just wanted to show a few pics about moving a Scotch Bonnet joungster over from soil to a dutch bucket.
first of all - what is a dutch bucket?
I guess its fairly evident ... basically its a bucket with a spout just a few inches above the bottom ... its used for flood-and-drain hydroponics. Normally those would be watered a couple of times a day for a couple of minutes (e.g. 3 x 5min) and they all drain into a common rail that delivers the nutrient solution back to the reservoir where the pump sits.
In theory, the roots get the best of both words - all the nutes they need and all the oxigen for 23+ hours per day ...
I have no particular reason to transplant the "Bon Scott" other than my curiosity - the good thing is I have a comparable sister plant in soil - so I will benchmark/update the progress of both.
here a pic of our traveller ... I was impressed with the root-system of the plant... not bad for sitting in a conventional 1 quart pot ... the root system looks more like plant in air-pruning pots I have seen before ...
I use myco, worm-castings, seabird-guano and AACT and I think this is the reason for the healty root life. No synth. fert's have been used on this plant until now.
'nother angle
I carefully got the soil out of the root system (was not too tricky, as I had good, fluffy soil)... here you see the "wet poodle" pic
I parked the plant for maybe 20 mins in a myco/molasses solution to get any possible inoculation going ... (have no idea if it worked, especially if you can get myco going in hydro, but then again it was no real expense involved)
here's the pic with the solution
finally I moved the plant over .... my setup of the bucket is a "wally-bag" with perlite within the bucket, which serves both as:
- primary container
- airpruning pot
- filter (avoiding getting perlite flowing around in the whole system and clogging up stuff)
my system is pretty "ghetto", as I currently flood-and-drain manually with another bucket (pouring and recovering the solution).
once the system proves being worth the time/$$$ - I will move up to a more automated pumping and plumbing system ...
cheers,
Al
ps: forgot to take a pic of the plant in the bucket - I will do that tomorrow, together with the "benchmark sister"
I just wanted to show a few pics about moving a Scotch Bonnet joungster over from soil to a dutch bucket.
first of all - what is a dutch bucket?
I guess its fairly evident ... basically its a bucket with a spout just a few inches above the bottom ... its used for flood-and-drain hydroponics. Normally those would be watered a couple of times a day for a couple of minutes (e.g. 3 x 5min) and they all drain into a common rail that delivers the nutrient solution back to the reservoir where the pump sits.
In theory, the roots get the best of both words - all the nutes they need and all the oxigen for 23+ hours per day ...
I have no particular reason to transplant the "Bon Scott" other than my curiosity - the good thing is I have a comparable sister plant in soil - so I will benchmark/update the progress of both.
here a pic of our traveller ... I was impressed with the root-system of the plant... not bad for sitting in a conventional 1 quart pot ... the root system looks more like plant in air-pruning pots I have seen before ...
I use myco, worm-castings, seabird-guano and AACT and I think this is the reason for the healty root life. No synth. fert's have been used on this plant until now.
'nother angle
I carefully got the soil out of the root system (was not too tricky, as I had good, fluffy soil)... here you see the "wet poodle" pic
I parked the plant for maybe 20 mins in a myco/molasses solution to get any possible inoculation going ... (have no idea if it worked, especially if you can get myco going in hydro, but then again it was no real expense involved)
here's the pic with the solution
finally I moved the plant over .... my setup of the bucket is a "wally-bag" with perlite within the bucket, which serves both as:
- primary container
- airpruning pot
- filter (avoiding getting perlite flowing around in the whole system and clogging up stuff)
my system is pretty "ghetto", as I currently flood-and-drain manually with another bucket (pouring and recovering the solution).
once the system proves being worth the time/$$$ - I will move up to a more automated pumping and plumbing system ...
cheers,
Al
ps: forgot to take a pic of the plant in the bucket - I will do that tomorrow, together with the "benchmark sister"