Clay Pebbles
Also known as 'hydrostone', these small round baked spheres of clay are inert and are extremely suitable for any hydroponic system where all the nutrients are carefully controlled in the water. Clay pebbles can be reused, provided they are cleaned thoroughly in-between crops.
Rockwool
Rockwool gets its name from its physical properties: it is, in fact, pieces of basalt rock that have been spun out to form a wooly substrate. This 'wool' is then compressed into blocks. Before use, rockwool must be soaked in pH 5-6 water with a cF of 12 (cF stands for 'conductivity factor', which is, put simply, the amount of nutrient in the water. If you do not have a cF meter, just follow the formula on the back of the packet and you will be fine) for a few minutes. The rockwool should then be removed and squeezed slightly to remove approximately 10 per cent of its water. Rockwool can be bought in 'cuttings cubes', cubes that are good for inserting cuttings into, 'transplantation cubes', which are for inserting cuttings cubes into and then placing into a larger system, as large slabs, or as very small 1cm cubes, which are used in place of clay pebbles or some other medium. These tiny cubes are known as 'Cellmax', but are still rockwool. Note that fibres of rockwool can break off and lodge in a user's lungs, causing irritation, so care must be taken.
Rockwool exhibits a behavior called 'conditioning' in which it gradually absorbs phosphorus. New rockwool usually has a pH around 7.4 - 7.6. The absorbed phosphorus is available to plants, but is removed from the nutrient solution. Over time as the phosphorus builds up, the rockwool becomes 'conditioned' and absorbs progressively smaller quantites of phosphorus until it becomes saturated. This process is beneficial to flowering plants because the rockwool serves as a storage for the large quantities of phosporus needed during flowering. Providing large amounts in the nutrient solution could cause nutrient burn and excessively low pH, which in turn would lock out other nutrients.
Coco Coir
Coco is a compressed medium created from the husks of coconuts. These are pH balanced, so need only to be soaked in water before use. Some coco blocks are 'unbuffered', and so need to be soaked in buffering solution.Coco coir comes also in bags and in slabs.
Present and future
With pest problems reduced, and nutrients constantly fed to the roots, productivity in hydroponics is high, plant growth being limited by the low levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, or limited light. To increase yield further, some sealed greenhouses inject carbon dioxide into their environment to help growth, or add lights to lengthen the day, control vegetative growth etc.
Hydroponics can be used to grow plants anywhere, from Antarctica (where salad vegetables are grown in the 6 month nights) to a coal mine. When vegetables are grown in future space missions, it is likely to be by hydroponic methods. The fact that plants can be grown almost anywhere, with no natural light by using hydroponics and lighting has not escaped the notice of clandestine marijuana growers, and a large amount of hydroponics equipment appears to be in use for this purpose. In the UK, theft of high intensity grow lamps from commercial vegetable growers is a chronic problem. Wide availability and low cost of equipment in the U.S. makes theft from greenhouses a rare event.
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