Rushed
Active Member
Anybody have a Omega Garden?
This is the strangest garden apparatus I've ever seen. Are any of you familiar with the Omega Garden, a cylindrical growing tube which rotates around a central light? The plants' roots are dipped once per each rotation into water/nutrients. It's pretty odd, but it looks like it saves space! OmegaGarden.com - Omega Gardens: Industry Leading Hydroponics Designs for Indoor Gardening
Plants are predominantly affected by gravity. Growing in the opposite direction and maintaining verticality, so as to draw water up, away from gravity. Therefore the Omega Garden cylinder needs to be in constant motion. One revolution an hour, twenty four hours a day, seven days a week. If the garden stops turning for any length of time, the plants on their sides, or inverted, will turn and grow towards the sky, regardless of where the light source is. Light sources adjacent, or even below will have no effect on this phenomenon.
The result of the constant rotation is compaction, with unusually strong growth in all directions. We call this phenomenon “ORBITROPISM”. For example, basil with stalks more like bamboo than basil. Tomatoes and peppers standing straight up without hanging or sagging, and holding firm throughout their rotation. Seeming to defy gravity
I can only imagine what some sweet sweet MJ would look like, and the yeilds that could be had out of this thing.
If any of my fellow growers have any input please fill me in.
This is the strangest garden apparatus I've ever seen. Are any of you familiar with the Omega Garden, a cylindrical growing tube which rotates around a central light? The plants' roots are dipped once per each rotation into water/nutrients. It's pretty odd, but it looks like it saves space! OmegaGarden.com - Omega Gardens: Industry Leading Hydroponics Designs for Indoor Gardening
Plants are predominantly affected by gravity. Growing in the opposite direction and maintaining verticality, so as to draw water up, away from gravity. Therefore the Omega Garden cylinder needs to be in constant motion. One revolution an hour, twenty four hours a day, seven days a week. If the garden stops turning for any length of time, the plants on their sides, or inverted, will turn and grow towards the sky, regardless of where the light source is. Light sources adjacent, or even below will have no effect on this phenomenon.
The result of the constant rotation is compaction, with unusually strong growth in all directions. We call this phenomenon “ORBITROPISM”. For example, basil with stalks more like bamboo than basil. Tomatoes and peppers standing straight up without hanging or sagging, and holding firm throughout their rotation. Seeming to defy gravity
I can only imagine what some sweet sweet MJ would look like, and the yeilds that could be had out of this thing.
If any of my fellow growers have any input please fill me in.