Hydro setup help.

420tokeup

Active Member
Hello all:

I'm looking at doing an outdoor setup. I've got the setup planned out but I just have 2 questions I'm confused about....

Do you guys run the water drip 24/7 continously? My plants are in soil right now verging but I'll be moving them to 100% clay rock when the frost is over.

Also do I need an aerator added to the reservoir for O2?
 

Billy the Mountain

Well-Known Member
I do outdoor hydro hot peppers using coco in 5 gal buckets.

They get scheduled fertigation with some drip emitters, 3-5x day depending on the growth stage and weather.

Clay pebbles may not be the best choice for outdoors as it doesn't hold much water. This requires much more frequent fertigation. I did use a combo of hydroton and vermiculite for a few years with good results.

Ultimately, it depends on your setup and the environment.

My reservoir for the outdoor grow only lasts a few days at most; I've never aerated it, but your mileage may vary.
 

420tokeup

Active Member
I do outdoor hydro hot peppers using coco in 5 gal buckets.

They get scheduled fertigation with some drip emitters, 3-5x day depending on the growth stage and weather.

Clay pebbles may not be the best choice for outdoors as it doesn't hold much water. This requires much more frequent fertigation. I did use a combo of hydroton and vermiculite for a few years with good results.

Ultimately, it depends on your setup and the environment.

My reservoir for the outdoor grow only lasts a few days at most; I've never aerated it, but your mileage may vary.

Thank you for your informative reply. Gave me a lot more to think about.

I've done soil in the past with success. Trying to venture into hydro while utilizing the greatest power source, our sun.
 

RottyRzr

Well-Known Member
I'll add my experience with outdoor hydro. I too grow hot peppers in hydro. I use dutch buckets filled with 100% perlite. I line the buckets with 5 gallon paint strainer bags from Lowes and fill with perlite. This helps to keep the larger roots from clogging the drain.
I use a 17 gallon tote (also from Lowes) for a reservoir and dug a hole to set the tote in. This helps keep the nutrient solution from getting too hot from the sun.
I just use a small fountain pump with 1/2" tubing for the main line and 1/4" tubing going to the buckets. I insert a short piece of 1/2" pvc pipe in the perlite to direct the 1/4" tubing toward the plant base under the perlite surface. (Hope that makes sense) The 1/4" tubing is ran straight into the 1/2" pipe with no dripper attached. The pump is on a timer and I run it for 1 minute at a time. I'll start off the season with only 2 feeds per day and as the temperatures increase outside I'll up the feeds to 3 times per day and then 4 times being the max.
I ran the drains from the buckets into a pipe and it drains back into the tote. (reservoir) When the reservoir gets low I just refill it.
My pepper plants grown like this look better than any I've ever grown in soil.
There is a guy on you tube with a channel called mhpgardener that grows like this. Look him up and watch some of his videos.
I had lots of pics on this computer but I kept getting warnings about the drive being full so I either deleted them or moved a lot of my pics to a external hard drive so I'm unable to show any right now. If I get time I'll see if I can post a couple.

Good luck
 
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