Bigger and Better Things (My New Garden)

With our first harvest under our belt, and some killer Chem Dawg for our troubles, Its time for some shiny new hydro equipment. We decided the best approach was to upgrade everything…Starting with the walls. As chic as wood paneling, and garbage bags are, I decided a 4′x4′ hydro tent with reflective Mylar walls is a little more energy efficient.

Now for my sun, Sunlight Supply’s Magnum XXXL 8″, or as they affectionately call it, The OCHO.

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Its the biggest reflector in their line, and probably the biggest I have ever seen. It almost entirely fills our tent. Light distribution smooth, even, and intense. Running a SolarMax HPS we are spreading 147,000Lumens across a 4′x4′x2′ garden.

As for the ballast, we decided to go with a magnetic ballast t to save some money in the short run. Digital ballasts reduce power consumption, so if you plan on growing for a while, you will definitely appreciate the digi.

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The tray is Botanicare’s 48″x48″ tray. What they don’t tell you is that 48″ is the bottom measurement, at the top it is actually 52″x52″ so good luck fitting it into a 48″ tent. I had to take off the edges with a Skil saw, and it still doesn’t fit with the door closed. Measure your parts before you take them home! For the time being, a slightly larger door is being cut out of panda film. Next time I’ll have to decide whether to buy a new tent 3″ larger or, a new tray almost a foot smaller. It’s a good thing I seem to enjoy shopping for this stuff so much.

Outside of the tent is an Oracle Revolution 6 455cfm duct fan. The fan performs multiple tasks; it provides fresh air, by replacing all the air in the tent 3-4x a minute, it air cools the light, without it the light would overheat and explode, finally it force feeds all of the air coming out of the room into a Can50 38-Special carbon filter.  The insulated ducting helps quiet it down, and keep your exhaust from warming up your room (Home Depot carries it cheaper than anywhere else).

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After careful inspection of our power bill, we realized about half of our consumption was coming from a 25yr old built in air conditioner. This time we went with a window mount energy star a/c unit. It is more than enough for our little room. It can also be run on low to help lower humidity. The efficiency we gained from the air conditioner should negate the cost of upgrading our light from 600w-1000w. It’s always good to keep electricity usage as stable as possible.

Now all that’s missing is the herb. My next article will detail the building and use of an aeroponic cloner.

Disaster!

It was a cold fall night… this past Saturday. My partner and I were changing the reservoir, and we noticed as it cooled down that the temp at the top of the buds had already dropped to 64.5, and the rest of the plant was even colder! Since the light is on yo-yo’s we dropped it down about 6″ and watched the thermometer. After an hour, the temperature seemed to be holding between 69-72 with all the little girls huddled up under the light. It was a beautiful sight, I wish I had a picture…sigh. The next day I came in to check on my babies, I knew something was wrong before I even saw them. The fan had apparently shook itself to death.

395  240x180 dscn2326 Disaster!
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Without the fan helping to circulate the air conditioning, the temperature under the lamp got too hot for weed.

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All my beautiful tops were burnt to a crisp.

379  120x80 dscn2307 Disaster! 374  120x80 dscn2297 Disaster! 385  120x80 dscn2316 Disaster! 386  120x80 dscn2318 Disaster! 382  120x80 dscn2313 Disaster!
 

85 Isn’t enough to kill them, as you can see the tops burnt pretty good, but for the most part only the top 3″ or so of each plant was damaged. Unfortunately, the top is the prettiest freshest part, and I was way looking forward to them.

So I pulled the light up to about 2′ away from them, and ran down the street, and grabbed the only little oscillating fan i could find. It turns out they are a seasonal item, so by the fall they are all gone. Once I set up the fan, and restored air circulation, the temperature dropped down to about 70. I immediately mixed up a foliar spray of B-52 w/penetrator (pH 5.6 ppm 600).

In order to prevent this from EVER happening, make sure to maintain fans and all equipment at least once a week. I am setting 2 fans, each blowing air in different directions next to each other. It is redundant, and a waste of electricity, but anything is worth the price to never have to see my babies suffer like that again.

The Importance of pH

This past week has been a mess. I have been running all over the state helping a couple of friends get started. Unfortunately, in my absence, we developed a bit of a mold (fungal?) infestation. All of us were out of town over the weekend, and when we got back our plants were looking a little more yellow than usual. Upon further investigation, the pH and ppm had skyrocketed! When I first saw something slightly furry growing on the circulation pump, I asked a friend who told me not to worry, it was just nutrient residue… He was wrong. The next day when I checked the ppm it had jumped from 1800 (1200 food, 600 hard water) to 2400 (…?!). The pH had jumped tremendously as well from its usual 5.5-6 up to 7.5-8 (using the liquid test kit this is the max range on the bottle… could’ve been higher). It was in the middle of feeding, and with the res level low I could see the pump completely covered in white fuzz. In a knee jerk reaction, i grabbed a bottle of lemon juice, an began to pour it onto the pump. To my amazement, lemon juice killed it on contact, and washed it away clean. This when I realized I was definitely growing something unwelcome.

We originally believed the source of the problem was the clear reservoir. We cleaned everything out with soap, tap water (yum…chlorinated), and an entire bottle of 3% hydrogen peroxide. Hydrogen peroxide is used as an antiseptic, it is H202, basically really unstable water, when exposed to air and water, the Oxygen shoots off leaving behind water. How does this kill germs? Imagine feeding rice to a pigeon… it goes in, then pop! (sorry if the metaphor was a little grim, I got nothing against pigeons, really, I just get frustrated when my plants are aren’t healthy)

3% Hydrogen Peroxide

Once exposed to the peroxide, the white stuff would turn brown and dead, and wash away easily. After we had scrubbed everything as clean as we could, it took abut an hour, we put it all back together, added food and 1.5tsp hydrogen peroxide per gallon, and crossed our fingers.

Two days later… back to ground zero. pH-8 ppm-2500 white chunky stuff floating in my reservoir. I pH the water back with lemon juice, and vinegar. This time it takes a ridiculous amount of acid to return to a safe range (I didn’t measure, but I would say about 5x as much as usual). The next morning we took a trip down to The Home Depot, we figured that since the bottom tub was infected, and the top tub wasn’t, we figured the pathogen was probably really enjoying our 600w sun, and decided to switch to a black reservoir.

Once again, we removed the entire reservoir (pumps, tubes, air stones, et al.), soaked it with dish soap, tap water, and a whole bottle of 3% hydrogen peroxide, and scrubbed till our hearts were content, then threw away the clear plastic Petri dish.

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With the black reservoir in place, and armed with our new friend hydrogen peroxide, and a couple of fresh lemons, we mixed up a new batch of water for the girls. They got mostly sugar and B vitamins to help them recover, and I took off to hunt down some Revive from Advance Nutrients. I picked up some Revive for a friend, and got to see it in action. He had had a tough week, he underfed his plants, then overcompensated, burned them, and created nutrient lockout. He was flushing when I got there, we added a couple hundred ppm of revive to the water, and mixed up a foliar spray for the particularly sad girls. Over the next half hour we watched as all of the yellow leaves began to return to green. Of course when I need some, its not that easy, the stores around me don’t carry it… I end up adventuring far and wide, and just gave up and crashed at a buddy’s pad.

Two days later… Its Back!!!! Finally, it’s time to consult a professional. It’s been almost a week now, and my girls are still yellow. I took a trip down to the hydro store, I described my symptoms, and how I had attempted to solve it… They were about stumped too. None of the guys there had ever seen a mold matching my description. The roots have no signs of rot or decay, its not spreading into the grow medium, it only lives in my reservoir, it makes my water super alkaline, and it won’t go away!!! Since we are in flower, using a chemical fungicide is out of the question, so the only recommendation they had was to kick it up to some industrial strength H202. Mad Farmer’s Oxygenator is a 35% aqueous hydrogen peroxide solution.

Oxygenator

So this time we disassembled the reservoir, took everything into the shower, and poured in half a bottle of bleach and a gallon of water, scrubbed everything, and let it soak for half an hour. When you rinse it out make sure you do so thoroughly, take it into the shower, and rinse it way longer than you think you should… bleach kills living things. Once we put it all back together, I mixed up some fresh water with 1.25tsp/gal of the Oxygenator, and got the pH to 5.6 squeezing in a fresh lemon (note-possible source of contamination: unrefrigerated lemon juice can grow bacteria). Oxygenator is the business, we gave them a short 15min feeding with the water peroxide solution to clean out the root zone (just in case). I took a peak into the top table while they were feeding, and it looked like club soda, every surface was covered in tiny scrubbing bubbles, and the water was remarkably clear. I wish I could post a picture, but it wouldn’t come out.

Hydrogen Peroxide is great for killing bacteria, however it kills beneficial bacteria as well, not just the bad ones. However beneficial bacteria probably would have stopped it from taking hold in the first place. We just bought a reverse osmosis unit from ebay this week. I’ll post an article on setup, and that will open the door to a series on the benefits of using bacteria offensively :-)

Also if we the plants were still vegetating, we could have used a mild dose of commercial fungicide. I have had good results with Physan 20. It is a disinfectant, fungicide, virucide, and algaecide, so the only living thing is the plant. Be careful, too much of this stuff will kill everything! I recommend 1tsp/gal or less, and reapply if necessary.

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