Hydroponics Principles
For
Cannabis Cultivation
What is
cannabis hydroponics?
Hydroponics is simply the growing of plants
without soil. Instead, plants are grown in an
inert medium (or none at all) and an oxygenated,
balanced nutrient solution is delivered to a their
root systems. That's it!
Why does Cannabis
Hydroponics produce such fantastic
results?
By
giving a plant the exact nutrients
it needs we accomplish several things:
#1
We give it a perfect diet. In nature this is next
to impossible, so when this actually happens,
plants GROW & GROW & GROW.
#2 When
we GIVE the plant it's food it doesn't have to go
out looking for it. Plants actually expend energy
looking for food by growing huge root systems. If
the plant doesn't have to waste energy looking for
food, it puts all of it's effort into the parts
above ground. The results are rapid, large healthy
growth and massive fruit and flower
production.
#3 By necessity, hydroponic
systems are automated. This removes the negative
human influence from plant cultivation.
Specifically, forgetting to water, or watering too
much.
How do I
grow my cannabis plants hydroponically?
Fortunately, many methods of hydroponic
growing have been invented throughout the years -
from painfully simple to slightly complex. All you
need to do is select the system that meets your
needs and build it. As luck would have it, all of
the systems that have been invented use very basic
items assembled into very basic mechanisms. There
is practically no method you cannot construct at
home with no more than hand tools and commonly
available parts.
Nutrients
All plants,
weather grown hydroponically or in soil, need 16
basic elements to grow. Most of us are familiar
with the top three that are consumed by plants.
These elements are called the Macro-Elements and
they are Nitrogen Phosphorous and Potassium, they
are abbreviated N P K. You probably have seen
these letters on bags of common fertilizer. The
other 13 elements are grouped together as the
Micro-Elements. Most people are not familiar with
these elements because we have always counted on
them being present in the soil, which works for
the most part.
Pre-Formulated
Nutrients: This is really the best option for
the hobby to small farm hydroponic grower. You can
be assured that all of the necessary nutrients are
present and available to the plants. All you have
to do is mix a predetermined amount of concentrate
with water and add it to your system. If you want
to be successful as a first time hydroponic
grower, use a ready made nutrient specifically for
hydroponics.
Pre-Formulated Nutrients come in
the forms of 1-part powders, 2-part powders,
1-part liquids, 2-part liquids, & 3-part
liquids. I have found that nutrients are pretty
much nutrients, with the exception of the General
Hydroponics 3-part flora series. This one nutrient
system really stands out above the rest, it gives
the best results by far. You can customize the mix
for specific crops and different phases of the
crop (i.e. one mix for vegetative growth and
another for flowering/fruiting phases of
growth).
Formulating your own: Once
you have some experience with hydroponics and you
are producing large crops of a specific plant, you
may want to look into formulating your own
nutrients. Since all plants do not consume the
same amounts of nutrients (individual elements)
you can possibly save yourself some money by
making very specific formulas for your crop. This
involves a good amount of chemistry knowledge,
some lab equipment and each of the 16 individual
elemental nutrients. Many crop specific formulas
exist from others' research, all you have to do is
find the right recipe and mix it up. Over time you
will probably adjust this formula to match your
growing conditions and crop more closely. Mixing
your own is best left to the more experienced who
are producing large amounts of one crop (i.e. 1/4
acre on up).
Miracle Grow: Many
people insist on trying to use miracle grow plant
food as a hydroponic nutrient. It is true that
this is great stuff for soil, I personally use it
on my flowers, grown in the dirt garden, and man
do they freak out. Let me stress though, this
stuff is not a complete nutrient for hydroponics.
It does contain some micro elements, but not all.
Your plants will start out fine using this, but
eventually they will suffer from deficiencies. In
the long run it is not worth the cost savings over
a real hydroponic nutrient. The analogy would be
something like buying a brand new corvette and
then having the cheapest tires put on it and
filling up with the cheapest gasoline. You will
not even come close to getting the performance
that is possible.
Nutrient
Additives
There are quite
a few hydroponic additives on the market. They
mainly consist of combinations of kelp extracts,
bone meal and blood meal. They are commonly sold
as "Organic" boosters just to hook the "green"
crowd. They are supposed to supply enzymes,
hormones, vitamins, amino acids, sugars, and plant
acids that can't be supplied by hydroponic
nutrients. I believe that there are some merits to
using these additives, but many of the claims made
by these products are UNFOUNDED and UNTRUE. I have
tried the "Earth Juice Catalyst" and I THINK that
I saw a performance increase, but nothing major.
In the future I will perform an experiment with a
control group of plants to see how this stuff
really performs.
One additive that falls in
it's own class is the "DynaGRO PRO-TEEKT". It is a
potassium and silicon supplement that is supposed
to help increase resistance to pathogens, increase
resistance to heat stress and build stem strength.
I have yet to try this product.
The bottom line on
additives: There are no scientific studies showing
any benefits so the jury is still out. Buyer
beware!!
pH
pH is simply
the measure of the acid content of a solution. The
pH scale runs from 1 to 14, 1 being very acidic, 7
is neutral, and 14 is very basic. pH affects the
ability of a plant's roots to absorb nutrients.
The range in which nutrient absorption is best is
from 5.8 to 6.5.
Measuring pH: You can
measure pH either chemically or electronically.
Chemical test kits cost about $8 to $18, they are
accurate but you have to replace them periodically
because the chemicals are consumed. Electronic
methods typically are packaged as a pen that you
simply dip into the solution and the pH is read
out on a digital LCD display. pH pens cost about
$65 to $100, they are fairly accurate and must be
calibrated periodically. The benefit is ease of
use and they don't wear out - a wise
investment.
Adjusting pH: To lower
pH add acid. The best acids to use are phosphoric,
nitric, and sulfuric acid, these acids
disassociate and free up phosphorous, nitrogen an
sulfur respectively. Nitrogen, Phosphorous and
Sulfur are all elements that plants need for
growth. I have heard of people using Distilled
Vinegar for pH adjustment, this seems a bit
sketchy to me but I suppose it would word in a
pinch.
To raise pH add a base. The bases used
in hydroponics are Potassium Hydroxide and Sodium
Hydroxide. These disassociate and provide
Potassium and Sodium, respectively. Another pH up
"elixir" that I have heard of is baking soda -
personally I think this is a bad
idea.
When adding acid or base to adjust your nutrient
solution, add small amounts at a time and wait
about 1/2 hour to take a measurement. The closer
your pH is to 7, the less acid or base it takes to
effect change. This change takes place
exponentially, for example: it can take two
milliliters of acid move the pH of 25 gallons of
nutrient from 7 to 6. From 6 to 5 it can take 8
milliliters, from 5 to 4 it can take 500
milliliters. BE CAREFUL and make changes
slowly.
Making your own pH adjusting
solutions: One quart of acid or base from
General Hydroponics retails for about $7.00. This
is the biggest rip off in the hydroponic business!
It takes about $10.00 of concentrated acid or base
to make 2000 gallons of pH adjusting solution.
Subtract packaging and shipping and you'll see
that they turn $10 into $4000. OUCH!!!!!
Organic
Nutrients (??????)
With the relatively
recent green movement the concept of "Organic"
food production rings louder and louder every day.
"Organic" guidelines generally prohibit the use of
any refined chemicals in food production. The
result is fertilizers derived from compost and
animal waste.
Naturally people want to try
to apply these principles to hydroponics in the
form of a teas made from compost and other natural
ingredients. This seems logical but the result is
counter productive when used in a hydroponics
environment. To understand why, we must first
understand what nutrients are and how they are
absorbed by plants.
Plants rely upon
sixteen basic chemical elements for food -
Nitrogen, Potassium, Phosphorus, Calcium,
Hydrogen, and Oxygen are just a few. These
elements must be in a form that can be absorbed by
a plant. This form is a chemical salt - a very
basic chemical compound containing one of the
sixteen elements and a complementary element that
forms a salt. These "elemental" salts are what is
absorbed from the soil by a plant's root sysetm.
To be perfectly clear here - it is salts and only
salts that a plat absorbs, nothing else.
So, the big question is - In the
natural"organic" cycle of things how do these
chemical salts get into the soil? Let's start with
organic material (compost) and follow it to
absorption by the plant. A bit of compost contains
complex organic chemical chains that contain the
elements for the chemical salts that eventually
will be absorbed by a plant. At this point these
complex chemicals cannot be used by a plant. When
the compost gets mixed into the soil it starts to
be acted upon by soil born bacteria. This
bacteria is what breaks the organic material down
into the chemical salts that can be used by
plants.
Organic material +
Soil Born Bacteria = Nutrient
Salts
Mother Nature
uses bacteria to refine organic material into
inorganic chemical compounds for plant absorption.
In a hydroponic system sufficient bacteria are not
present for this critical conversion, instead we
must provide these refined chemicals directly to
the system.
For those who insist that they
can do it "organically" there are some "organic"
nutrient mixes available for you to try. They
typically produce limited results that I believe
is entirely counterproductive to the hydroponic
philosophy. I suggest that if you want to grow
organically, do it in the dirt. Heavily supplement
your soil with natural fertilizers and you will
get excellent results. I do this in my own dirt
garden and everything grows wonderfully.
Oxygen
We all
learned in grade school that plants "breathe" in
Carbon Dioxide and exhale oxygen. However, the
thing that wasn't talked about is how the root
systems use oxygen!! In hydroponic practice one of
the major directives is to supply an oxygenated
nutrient to the plat root system. So, in whatever
type ofhydroponic system that we use, we need to
make sure that the nutrient is properly
oxygenated.
Putting
it all together
All
right, all right, you don't need to know all of
the dirty details to get going, you can learn that
stuff later.
Here's what you
do:
Overview: In order to get your
feet wet with hydroponics we are going to choose a
simple, low maintenance hydroponic system and grow
a hearty medium growing speed plant in order to
keep nutrient usage to a minimum. Use a one-part
nutrient (just mix with water) and unless you live
in an area with EXTREMELY hard water don't worry
about pH.
The system: I highly
recommend using the "Aquafarm" type bucket based
system (see the free plans) for starters. They are
extremely cheap and require practically no effort
to operate.
The Plants: To begin
with grow a semi-hearty cannabis such as thyme,
mint, or basil. These plants are basically weeds
and don't care too much about having a critical
nutrient or pH balance. Also, since they are a
weed, they really go nuts when you give the
hydroponic treatment. We also choose this type of
plant because it is relatively slow growing and
won't be using large volumes of nutrient solution.
In the peak of the growing season, plants like
tomatoes, squash and cucumbers can use many
gallons of nutrient per day. Avoid these in the
beginning otherwise you will be constantly
worrying about maintaining nutrient levels - later
on you'll see that with a bigger commitment, there
are simple ways of maintaining the nutrients
automatically.
Nutrients: Initially,
I recommend using a one-part nutrient such as the
General Hydroponics "Flora-Magic". It is a
one-part powder that you simply mix with
water.
Maintenance: The only
thing you'll need to do is monitor the nutrient
level in your hydroponic system topping the level
off with water between scheduled nutrient changes.
Initially, your young plants will not use much
nutrient at all, so changing the nutrient once
every two weeks is sufficient. Once the plants
start consuming the nutrient then a once-a-week
change is in order. Drain the old nutrient into
your flower beds (it's still good stuff) and
recharge the system with fresh.
Lets talk
light!
or
Clarifying one of
the great mysteries of
gardening.
The first thing
we need to do is establish a basic vocabulary
about light & lighting. I'll describe the
terms and try to put them in as plain of English
as possible. Next, we need to establish reference
points to work from. Finally we will examine
different artificial lighting
systems.
Terminology
Lumen:
This is the basic unit of light. If you could
grab a bunch of light in your arms, the term lumen
would describe the amount of light that you have.
Since this is the description of the TOTAL amount
of light, it would go to follow that if you
stuffed that light (the ball that you had in your
arms) into a jar, the amount of lumens you have is
still the same. Conversely, if you let the ball of
light expand to fill the room the amount of lumens
is also the same.
Foot Candle: This
is the basic unit of light intensity or how much
light you shine on a given area. The foot candle
is based on how many lumens of light you shine on
a given area (measured in square feet). An example
would be: If you shine one lumen of light on one
square foot - you get one foot candle. If you
shine 10 lumens on one square foot - you get 10
foot candles. Light intensity is what really
counts for plant growth. This is the term that you
need to understand, for we will be talking about
it the most.
Watt: The watt is a
unit of energy that is commonly applied to
electricity. We will be using this term in
relation to artificial lighting.
Lumens
per Watt: This is relation to artificial
lighting. Lumens per watt refers to how many
lumens of light that a bulb generates per watt of
electrical usage. The higher the ratio, the more
efficient the lighting system will be.
Reference
Points
Outside
Daylight: This is the
biggy! Direct outside daylight in the summer time
is somewhere in the neighborhood of 10,000 foot
candles. This is equal to 10,000 lumens per square
foot. If you already know a little bit about
lighting, you will find this really amazing. If
not, as our discussion continues this will
eventually hit you as amazing.
Overcast
Daylight:1,000 foot candles.
Open
Shade: While standing under a large tall tree,
you experience the amount of light referred to as
open shade. The light intensity you experience
here is somewhere in the neighborhood of 300 foot
candles.
Deep Shade: 50 to 100 foot
candles.
Average Lit Room: 5 to 10
foot candles.
Full Moonlight: .02
foot candles.
Starlight: .00011
foot candles (that's 11 one-millionths )
Now is this amazing or what? The human eye
is mindboglingly sensitive, it can see from
daylight all the way down to starlight (one of my
hobbies is astronomy and I have found that after
your eye dark adapts you can see quite well under
the starlight). This is a ratio of 90 million to
1! Even more amazing is the fact that the eye can
make the bulk of this adjustment in a fraction of
a second. The rest happens in about 20 minutes.
Having brought this to light, you can
understand how it is easy to come to the
conclusion that an unknowingly unsuitable light
source would actually seem bright enough to grow
plants under by looking at it.
Lighting
Systems
Now we will
review the major lighting systems, their
efficiency, and examine how they perform in a
horticultural situation. If, per chance this
discussion gets too technical or boring you can
skip to the end of this segment and look at the
overall comparison chart to get a general idea of
how different lighting systems perform.
Basis for Calculations:In all of
the following examples we are going to assume that
the efficiency of the lighting system is 75%. In
other words, only 75% of the light created by the
bulb is reflected onto our example garden.
Furthermore, we are going to things by assuming that all
of the light aimed at our target area actually
hits the area - there is no "spillage" so to
speak. In practice results will be much different
- typically much lower than the stated figures.
The idea of this presentation is to communicate
the practicality of different lighting systems by
placing them on common ground (which really
doesn't exist) and comparing them to one another.
Incandescent: Incandescent lighting
is your common everyday household light bulb.
Their efficiency is in the range of 4 lumens per
watt. This means that a 100 watt bulb will
generate 400 lumens - TOTAL. (Here's the big leap)
Now, if we COULD reflect all of that 400 lumens
onto 1 square foot we would get a light intensity
of 400 foot candles. It is really not practical
that we could design any reflector system that is
100% efficient, so for the purposes of our
discussions we will assume 75% reflectance for all
of our lighting systems. If we account for the
loss in reflectance, we now get 300 foot candles
from an incandescent bulb focused on one square
foot.
Lets step back here and do a
comparison.... 300 F.C. Compared to 10,000? Wow!
we aren't even close to daylight.
If we
used one 100 watt bulb over a 4 foot by 4 foot
garden the light intensity would be 18.75 F.C.,
Which is totally useless. If we wanted to shoot
for 500 F.C. for growing low light plants, we
would need 26 - 100 watt bulbs. If we wanted to
shoot for 1000 F.C. we would need 53 - 100 watt
bulbs over our garden. Aside from the electrical
nightmare, we have succeeded in creating an
easy-bake-oven instead of an indoor garden. I hope
that you see that incandescent light bulbs are
truly impractical for horticultural purposes.
Quartz Halogen: Halogens do a lot
better at and efficiency of about 20 lumens per
watt. Halogens are available in 1000 watt bulbs
and since we are trying for as much light as
possible, we'll use this for our example. A 1000
watt bulb producing 20 lumens per watt give us
20,000 lumens of total light energy. Our
hypothetical light fixture can only reflect 75% of
this, so we now have only 15,000 lumens to work
with. Our sample garden, 4 foot by 4 foot, has 16
square feet. When we shine our 15,000 lumens onto
16 square feet of growing area we get a light
intensity of 937 foot candles. No we're getting
into a useable range but, there is one major
drawback to halogens.....HEAT. Halogens produce a
disproportionate amount of heat in comparison to
their light output. Let's look for something
better.
Fluorescent: Since we are
trying to be educated gardeners, we will have
sought out the extra high output tubes for our
garden. These Fluorescent tube generate 2750
lumens per 40 watt tube. That's 68 lumens per watt
- now we are getting somewhere. Let's use enough
fixtures to cover our 4x4 garden. The fixtures are
4 feet long by six inches wide. This allows us to
cram 8 fixtures over our garden - using a total of
640 watts. Each fixture hold 2 tubes, so we have a
total of 16 tubes generating 2750 lumens each -
that's a total of 44,000 lumens. Subtracting for
the loss due to reflectance, we now have 33,000
lumens to cover our garden with. 33,000 divided by
16 square feet equals 2062 foot candles of light
intensity, ASSUMING the lights are right on
top of the plants. When you raise the lights to
accommodate for the plants the light intensity
drops rapidly. When you double the distance, you
cut the light intensity by four times - OUCH.
Using an array of 16 - 40 watt tubes you can
expect to achieve about 500 foot candles at a
distance of 12 inches. With this setup we can grow
low to medium light plants without burning them.
Metal Halide:This is
what we have been looking for. Metal halide lights
have an efficiency range of 80 - 120 lumens per
watt. This let's us use a lower input wattage,
generates more light and less heat than all of the
previous systems. The following table shows the
different wattage bulbs, their efficiency, total
light output, and the light intensity over a 4
foot x 4 foot garden.
Metal Halide Lighting
Comparison
| Wattage |
Lumens/Watt |
Total
Lumens |
Light
Intensity (in foot candles) |
| 175 |
80 |
14,000 |
650 |
| 250 |
82 |
20,500 |
950 |
| 400 |
100 |
40,000 |
1875 |
| 1000 |
120 |
120,000 |
5600 |
Many people
choke over the initial cost of a High Intensity
Discharge fixture, but in the long run they are
much cheaper. For the same amount of light output
M.H. uses 2-20 times less power than other light
sources.
Sodium Vapor: The king of
efficiency! Sodium vapor lights output from 90-150
lumens per watt. Sodium bulbs put out more light
than metal halides but the spectrum is severely
shifted towards the red end of the spectrum. The
effects of the reddish light are supposed to
produce more flowering and fruiting than more
balanced lights.
Sodium Vapor Lighting
Comparison
| Wattage |
Lumens/Watt |
Total
Lumens |
Light
Intensity (in foot candles) |
| 150 |
106 |
16,000 |
750 |
| 250 |
110 |
27,500 |
1718 |
| 400 |
100 |
50,000 |
1875 |
| 600 |
150 |
90,000 |
4218 |
| 1000 |
140 |
140,000 |
8750 |
As you can see by the
table, sodium vapor wins the light intensity
contest hands down.
Spectrum
The diagram above shows
the full range of light and where each type of
lighting system falls within that range.
Artificial lights produce just a slice of the full
range. This leads to much discussion and
experimentation to determine which, or which
combination of lighting is best for a particular
crop.
Lets establish a reference point to
work from, examine several types of lighting and
put this information to practical
use.
Reference point: For most of
the daylight hours, the outside daylight peak is
centered on 5500 degrees Kelvin (refer to the
above chart).
Metal Halide: These
lights emit a light on the bluish side of the
spectrum. They are considered a grow light and it
is considered that they produce a more stalky
vegetative type of growth in plants. These lights
are commonly used throughout all phases of plant
growth and produce excellent results.
Agro Sun Halide: Agro
Sun is a hybrid halide bulb that generates extra
red light for flower and fruit production. This is
considered to be the best choice for artificial
lighting of plants.
Sodium Vapor:
Sodium vapor lighting is way down in the red.
There is some indication as well as a lot of
marketing hype that the spectrum produced by these
lights promote flowering. Personally, I'd like to
see a scientific study to verify
this.
The bottom
line on spectrum: Spectrum
is secondary to the over all indensity. Remeber,
in any artificial lighting situation, we are able
to provide only a fraction of natural lighting.
Therefore, it is more important to provide
intensity than any other lighting factor. For
example if you have to choose between a 70 watt
sodium vapor and a 400 watt metal halide the only
choice is the 400 watt system. The over all
performace will be much greater, even if you favor
a certain
spectrum.