ÂJohnT said:In regards to perched water table. I do fill the bottom of my containers with coarser material although I accept that is no guarantee. My dad taught me that we once got these epic tree containers from a landscaper and he had me pay money to buy bark mulch to put in the bottom, to facilitate drainage.
Nope, that's not me. I don't belong to that forum, and I don't recall having ever seen that before - so I can't take credit. But it *is* a good share, and helps to try to explain what I was just talking about. ^^^The_NorthEast_ChileMan said:As noted by Solid7 , over-watering is usually confined to containers due to Perched Water Table In Containers (Which he has posted about here.).
My containers all have drainage holes around the perimeter on the bottom.solid7 said:Â
No, that is not a good practice. Putting a different media in the container only pushes the perched water table up higher, and does the exact opposite of what you think you're doing with the coarser material.
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Perched water tables work on a differential between the specific gravities of two materials. The PWT is an absolute, it is not relative to any shape, volume, etc. If you have a material that holds 3" of water in the bottom, at its saturation point, then you will have 3" of water in the bottom, whether your container is 18" deep, or 3.5" deep, whether it's conical, spherical, etc, etc, etc. So if your container was 18" deep, and you added 3" of coarse material to the bottom, you now have 12" of container space that is not affected by the PWT. Whereas if you had left just the original media, it would have been 15" of non-impacted container space.
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The PWT works just like a sponge... You can pour water into a sponge, and it will absorb, up to a point. However, when it's saturated, the water will begin to drain under its own weight, with the sponge not longer being able to hold up the water. (remember that weight is defined as mass X gravity) Even so, you could still squeeze out a substantial amount of water, even after it begins to drain. That saturation point would be the sponge's PWT.
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In short... don't add "stuff" to the bottom of containers, thinking that you're getting drainage. You're just cheating yourself out of container capacity.
ÂJohnT said:My containers all have drainage holes around the perimeter on the bottom.
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I still may not be understanding. I have not seen the effect described, and my containers are emptied each year.
I could be wrong but I think PWT is a fancy way of saying the growing medium is waterlogged. I don't know. The cure for that is soil structure. Or that's what my background has taught me.Â
Âsolid7 said:Â
There is no cure for a PWT. It's a consideration OF structure. EVERY growable media has a PWT. The cure is, don't put anything in the bottom of your containers, that isn't what you're growing in. Or you're just creating the potential for more water retention in the bottom of the container, and/or lesser growing space in the actual media.
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Summary:
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Container full of well-built growing media = GOOD
Container full of well-built growing media with something else added at the bottom = BAD
Âsolid7 said:Â
In short... don't add "stuff" to the bottom of containers, thinking that you're getting drainage. You're just cheating yourself out of container capacity.
ÂJohnT said:Â
solid we're gonna have to agree to disagree on this one, at least until I see what you're seeing, PEACE
Âacs1 said:Â
Got to disagree with you. 'Stuff'Â added to the bottom of containers isn't to effect the PWT for me. Its to keep the drain holes from getting clogged with compacted soil or 'chunks' of mix.
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I always put washed gravel/small rocks in the very bottom of all my 'solid' containers, concentrating on the placement to keep drain holes open. The irregular shape and non water absorbing rocks do keep drain holes working well. They might be at most 1" high off the bottom.
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ÂJohnT said:soild what's your soil type in the container