jela10
Well-Known Member
I think you are on to something...wicking is enabled by capillary action. If the rocks are choking the wick the capillary density of the material becomes too tight for proper wicking. The rocks may simply be limiting the volume of H2O traveling up. Try rolling wider strips of material for a larger diameter wick and see if that helps. Other materials could make a big improvement too and yes socks may be a better substitute since they are designed to wick away moisture. An elephant sized tampon would be ideal however (LOL).Ok, First time grower here.
I have about a 10" bucket with a 6" pot sitting in the cap of bucket.
The media is aquarium rocks they won't wick well like media made for hydro so i made 4 wicks from an old t-shirt.
I have 4 wicks going from bottom of bucket to top of pot through the drainage holes on the bottom of the pot.
The problem:
I have let about an inch or less of the wick sit in water for over 12 hours and the top of the wick is still dry(i let it come out of the aquarium rocks from the top to test moisture)
the t-shirt wick is about 2" wide and 10-11" long although it curled up on itself so it is not that wide. When i look into the reservoir though, the wick seems to be completely wet.
EDIT: Do you think it is because aquarium rocks are too heavy and it squeezes the water out of the wick that is within media?
It seems the wick that is within the media is moist but the tip coming out of the media is still completely dry... I'm going to add 2 more wicks making it a total of 6 wicks for now.
Would socks work better than a t-shirt?
Any tips?
In my opinion, aquarium rock would be a better media suited for a top drip method, if you can work out a small submersible pump and a dripper hose....or go to a bubbler setup with an airstone that splashes the lower rock section with a netpot supporting your rocks. I too, am into the natural phenomena that power a robust plant growth....that's probably why I wear the hempy hat.