I asked about the general idea a while ago, but without a video to show the idea I think I fell short of explaining what I am thinking. Would love input because if I go this route, it is tons of work.
Underground: Underground / pit green houses in theory will retain enough passive heat to grow things like lettuce in the winter. From what I have read, warmer crops like peppers just sort of stall out with the lower temperatures. So how do we increase the amount of heat we can store from the day time?
If you have read anything about underground green houses or even Earth Shelter homes, part of the trick is to use water as a thermal mass to store the days heat and then slowly release at night. Often, the North wall of an underground green house will have 55 gallon drums filled with water and painted black to hold the heat and then release it.
The video in this link is not underground. I am linking it because it uses 55 gallon barrels for something else: fish. He talks about temperature being a challenge for various fish, but two things: He is not underground at all and he is only using some tiny amount of electricity.
Here is the thing I am thinking, underground with this system and an electric water heater with thermostat. The water has to be circulated, so might as well push it threw a heater, keep the water warm enough for the fish, and all that heat would help to heat the green house.
Thoughts? My biggest thought is that even if it wont keep peppers going in the dead of winter, it would certainly extend the season wildly and if I raise something like koi, well fingerlings sell for five bucks a fish retail. So even if the grow doesnt do great, got another product. That and I very much want to raise fish my kids can pet.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F3W03YlClmQ
Underground: Underground / pit green houses in theory will retain enough passive heat to grow things like lettuce in the winter. From what I have read, warmer crops like peppers just sort of stall out with the lower temperatures. So how do we increase the amount of heat we can store from the day time?
If you have read anything about underground green houses or even Earth Shelter homes, part of the trick is to use water as a thermal mass to store the days heat and then slowly release at night. Often, the North wall of an underground green house will have 55 gallon drums filled with water and painted black to hold the heat and then release it.
The video in this link is not underground. I am linking it because it uses 55 gallon barrels for something else: fish. He talks about temperature being a challenge for various fish, but two things: He is not underground at all and he is only using some tiny amount of electricity.
Here is the thing I am thinking, underground with this system and an electric water heater with thermostat. The water has to be circulated, so might as well push it threw a heater, keep the water warm enough for the fish, and all that heat would help to heat the green house.
Thoughts? My biggest thought is that even if it wont keep peppers going in the dead of winter, it would certainly extend the season wildly and if I raise something like koi, well fingerlings sell for five bucks a fish retail. So even if the grow doesnt do great, got another product. That and I very much want to raise fish my kids can pet.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F3W03YlClmQ