Yep, you’re right. It’s from way back and is still as true and correct as the day it was written and published.View attachment 3621398 View attachment 3621392 Wow a resurrected thread from way back huh lol
^^^^^I don't get the % when speaking in amounts of DO either but I'm relating it to something like relative humidity, so the amount it can hold to what it is holding, which is wrong obviously. But besides that, I got the rot in a spray system with no standing water and timed sprayers which I thought was pretty hard due to the amount of O2 available. Turns out that my actual root zone was getting above 70 on a consistent basis. Lowering the temps in both the root zone and Res, plus adding hydroguard has improved things tremendously from this (2nd pic) to this (1st pic), I have recently replaced the hydroguard with OregonismXL. Just a note that pool shock, bleach, and H2O2 did not seem to cure but did hold it at bay.
Prevention is cheaper and much less stressful than curing the disease. Plant health always suffers the most from the disease even upon recovery, weeks are lost.
Don’t feel alone, what happened to you is very common and well within the norm for the majority of farmers.
The low oxygen problem and paradox how to insure there will be no low oxygen problem has been around a while, but no is listening and the fix is often ignored as history demonstrated every day.
The “rot” is cause by an opportunist fungal pathogen, the fungi is ubiquitous, it’s everywhere all the time and it usually does not exhibit until the environment becomes oxygen deficient (hypoxic). Fungi (Pythium and other fungal species) thrive in low oxygen hypoxic environments. Clearly you had a low oxygen issue.
You mentioned, “Turns out that my actual root zone was getting above 70 on a consistent basis.” 70 what? What does 70 mean?
Waiting for the disease crisis to happen, then acting on disease crisis intervention: How much time did you waste from the time you realized you had a rot problem to the time toy applied the chemicals, days/hours? How much did all those chemicals and stuff cost? And how many hours of stress has this disease caused for you?
“Just a note that pool shock, bleach, and H2O2 did not seem to cure but did hold it at bay.” That’s all these chemicals did?
You might add this note too: That slimy brown/black glob of goo in the bottom of the res box is fungus, dead decaying plant material and dead microbes. All those harsh chemicals most probably also killed every Beneficial too along with every other microbe in the solution and root zone. Plus you entire system including water pumps and pipes are well contaminated with fungi too.
It’s easier and far less aggravating and expensive to prevent this disease problem than cure it after the fungi establishes itself and thrives in your DWC.
J