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Hydroponic Gardening
... Made Easy
By Simon Morris

Hydroponic gardening has become popular over the last few years because of its many benefits. Some of these are, the lack of insects inside the house, the ability to grow 24 hours a day, the ability to keep the temperature perfectly stable, the conservation of space requirements and the management of Carbon Dioxide levels, exactly where you want them. Hydroponic Gardening gives you control.





Hydroponics gardening does not use any dirt when growing the plants and there are many ways of doing this. The most common of these systems is the ebb and flow system.

This system fills up and drains a tray that the plants are sitting in, every few hours. This keeps the roots nice and wet. The water then drains into a reservoir under the plant tray where it waits to be reused.

This water has the perfect PH and amount of nutrients necessary for the plants that you are growing. The strong light, perfect atmosphere and a perfect nutrient mix creates a perfect plant. You can grow amazing veggies with hydroponics: peppers really come out great.

Hydroponics doesn't have to be done inside. People have outdoor systems too. Many of these systems have buckets filled with lava rock, a reservoir with the perfect nutrient water mixture all connected to a timer that lets the water flow in and out of the plant trays ever hour or so. There are many options for the growing medium in a hydroponics system. People use things like gravel, lava rocks, even rock wool cubes.

The hardest part of growing hydroponics is keep the correct PH level in the water. Like a jacuzzi there is one thing to raise PH and one thing to lower it but you still need to keep an eye on it.

The most popular way to check the PH is use the paper strips that turn colored after sticking them in the water. You can then match the color to a chart to determine the level. Another popular way is to use the digital PH meter which is the one I recommend because it reads much more accurately.

The type of system people pick is usually a personal choice. The three main types are the ebb and flow, the drip system and the Aeroponic system. These use the same concept, for the most part. The fertilizer you use is the most important choice if you plan on growing any edible plants.

If you are planning on growing veggies or herbs using the hydro system, make sure to ask questions about the soil so there is no chemicals or harmful ingredients in the mix. This is very important because some of the solutions are harmful for your health if they are consumed.

The best bet for edible plats is to use some organic solution. They sell these at most hydro stores. The problem with these is the PH levels are much more unstable and require constant checking.

If this sounds like the thing for you then I suggest giving hydroponics gardening a chance because it can give you the very best plants.

Though there might be hundreds of types of systems, the Drip, Ebb and Flow, Water, Wick, N.F.T Wick, Water Culture, and Aeroponic are the main ones.

Simon Morris is a horticulture specialist with over 10 years experience in the field. For detailed information go to:

http://www.ourgardensource.com/Container-Gardening/Hydroponic-Gardening.php

Article Source: http://ezinearticles.com

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