Hi folks, I would of posted this in the hydro forum, but don't have permission for some reason.
Anyways I'm developing some vertical grower for a project @ Uni (growing edible herbs and air cleansing plants).
One of the themes of the project is the use of recycled materials, the pots themselves will be made from upside down wine bottles with the bottoms cut off, and are then attached to a board a bit like this photo
except it will have a reservoir at the bottom with a pump to top row of bottles, which will hopefully trickle back down into the reservoir, in the same way a window farm would.
I'm thinking of using rock wool in net pots, then embedded in some sort of substrate (the bottles will be painted on the inside to avoid photosynthesis of the roots.
One idea I had was to use broken up corks as an alternative to clay pellets (moneys really tight, plus it would fit with the theme of recycled materials) does anyone think this will work, or would the top bottles absorb all of the water robbing the lower plants of their fair share.
If this is the case, would penlight work better (I have a sack of this kicking around so...)
thanks for reading, peace d
Anyways I'm developing some vertical grower for a project @ Uni (growing edible herbs and air cleansing plants).
One of the themes of the project is the use of recycled materials, the pots themselves will be made from upside down wine bottles with the bottoms cut off, and are then attached to a board a bit like this photo
except it will have a reservoir at the bottom with a pump to top row of bottles, which will hopefully trickle back down into the reservoir, in the same way a window farm would.
I'm thinking of using rock wool in net pots, then embedded in some sort of substrate (the bottles will be painted on the inside to avoid photosynthesis of the roots.
One idea I had was to use broken up corks as an alternative to clay pellets (moneys really tight, plus it would fit with the theme of recycled materials) does anyone think this will work, or would the top bottles absorb all of the water robbing the lower plants of their fair share.
If this is the case, would penlight work better (I have a sack of this kicking around so...)
thanks for reading, peace d