Featured Story
Watchout AeroGarden, theres a new countertop garden out.
UPDATE: Prepara has agreed to send us an evaluation unit, so We’ll be sure to keep you up to date on how our configuration and how well it works for us
I’ve had a personal fascination with the Aerogarden for quite some time now, but its price, and lack of options had me hesitant about buying one. The computer in it that controls nutrient distribution seems to me a bit too easy. I like to play with settings and see what the effects are (with all my toys).
Couple that with the “seed pods” they sell which are nice, but couldn’t they sell blanks and let me put in my own seeds? the lighting always bothered me too. A high output CFL will get the job done, but I would prefer something more robust and energy efficient such as an LED light. To me the aerogarden just seemed too limited and expensive.
Then today I came across the “Power Plant mini” Read more »
News
Woodbury Farm Market Celebrates 50th AnniversaryWOODBURY - Woodbury Farm Market, 717 Main Street South, is celebrating its 50-year anniversary.
Owner Sue Donato told Voices she remembers her parents, Eugene and the late Eleanor Cozzolino, working very hard, building their business and enjoying what they did.
In 1958, Woodbury Farm Market was located across the street from the current site of the business. The family moved the business across the street in 1976 where they sold fruits, vegetables and plants.
The Touch of Holly gift shop, long a popular stop, is run by Sue’s sister, Wendy Linholm.
Sue and her husband, Joe Donato, expanded Woodbury Farm Market’s offering in July, adding Donato’s Hydroponic House of Greens to the garden center greenhouse.
Joe Donato told Voices his interest in hydroponics came from, “our passion for growing, creating organic and pesticide-free greens, helping to preserve our earth, working green, extending our seasons, creating high quality products with the best taste and preserving the earth for future generations. This is a dream come true for us.”
Hydroponics
UK Greenhouse produces veggies year-round.
Highly demand for salad vegetables all-year round has led to the creation of a massive greenhouse development in Kent in the UK.
Seven high-tech greenhouses - each one covering land equivalent to about 10 football pitches - are being constructed at a cost of 80 million pounds on a 91-hectare site in the county of Kent, Thanet, in southern England.
The project is a joint venture between the UK’s biggest fresh produce supplier, the Fresca Group, and three major specialist Netherlands companies. They are Rainbow Growers (peppers), A&A (cucumbers) and Red Star Trading (tomatoes) that had watched the consumer trend, seen the value of the UK market and initiated the scheme.
The aim of the venture is to produce home-grown tomatoes, cucumbers and peppers all-year round and the project has been given the name Thanet Earth that the developers hope will reflect its “Planet Earth” green credentials.
Up to now, the increased call for salads in and out of season has been met by transporting produce from other countries in Europe or further still. The Thanet Earth plan will help to reduce the “food miles” required to meet the demand, says Fresca. It will also mean much greater freshness because the interval between picking tomatoes and other crops and their arrival in the shops will be much shorter.
Each of the computer-controlled 140-metre-long greenhouses is equipped with environmentally approved combined heat and power units instead of conventional boilers, and these will have several benefits, such as providing electricity.
Reducing energy use and resulting carbon emissions are, indeed, part of the UK government’s long-term plans.
Insects are expected to play their part in the scheme.Worker bees are going to be released into the greenhouses to pollinate the plants, and natural predators such as wasps will be used to deal with pests.
Advanced hydroponic techniques are to be used to grow the plants that will eventually number more than a million when each super-size greenhouse is fully operational.
Hydroponic growing techniques are relatively common in various countries including the Netherlands but, said a Fresca spokesman, they have not been tried on such a massive scale in the UK before.
Thanet Earth is expected to be fully functional by 2010.
Planting will start in September and by October the first produce will be start to appear on supermarket shelves.
Tips and Tricks
Maximum Growth
Once again, Michael Straumietis, of Advanced Nutrients has a bunch of tips for those of us who don’t quite know everything about hydroponics. The advice given this time around is about generally getting the biggest yield from your garden. No one technique will make your garden have massively different results, but add together a bunch of techniques and you have a huge difference.
Disease Prevention.
By protecting your garden and taking necessary precautions against disease you will help ensure great plant growth. Using a hydroponic nutrient system that contains salicylic acid. This compound helps beef up the plants natural defenses against disease. Keeping some fungicides nearby wouldn’t hurt either.
Being able to attack a fungal infection as soon as it starts may be what you need to save your crop should fungus break loose in your garden.
Read more »
Pest Control
Parasitic Wasps
Predator and parasitic wasps can be a great addition to your garden, indoors or out. Some species of wasp feed off of garden pests, and will be better for your garden (and you) that dousing it with chemicals.
Parasitic wasps dispatch garden pests in a unique, if not gruesome manner. When a parasitic wasp reaches maturity and needs to lay eggs, first it finds a suitable host. Read more »
Does Hydroponic mean organic?
Tips! - Calibrate your Meters!
Calibrate your digital pH and cf meters regularly. Using buffer 4 and buffer 7 for your pH meters and conductivity standard for your cf meter. Without regular calibrating, these meters could be out of skew, and a wrong reading can make a lot of difference.Have a question for Hydroponics Dictionary? Feel free to ask!
Hooked on Hydroponics
As you learn how to grow using hydroponics with these simple hydroponics experiments you may just find yourself taking part in a hobby that is not only exciting, but very educating as well. Hydroponics Dictionary will give you all the resources you need to further your indoor gardening hobby.You will learn how to create you're very own hydroponic systems that are simple, fast, and easy. Rediscover a new way to grow and garden with educational hydroponics. Hydroponics farming is the future - this website will show you how home made hydroponics will inspire today's youth for tomorrow!
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