lunes, 5 de agosto de 2013

Pondering the pH Factor in your Hydroponic Garden

Pondering the pH Factor in your Hydroponic Garden


There are many factors that are important in hydroponic gardening and one of the most important factors is the pH factor. The nutrients, water, trace elements, growing medium, and the gases at the roots have different electrical charges that are all engaged in a constant battle. All of these items surround the root system to exchange positive and negative charges, which helps the nutrients absorb into the roots to feed the plant.


The pH is the most important factor to monitor because the pH of a nutrient solution reads the outcome of an electrical battle between the roots and everything that surrounds them. The run off from growing plants in pots is the best place to measure the pH level.


The protein and enzyme molecules in a plant are structured in very specific shapes in order to catalyze a chemical reaction to build the plant cells. The need reactant molecules to fit precisely into their gaps so all of the negative and positive charges have to line up exactly. Plants are able to change their own cellular pH level to stop or help speed up a certain enzyme reaction.


The electrical charges in soil particles are different from those in mixtures with no soil. Because of this reason, different pH levels for nutrient uptake are needed for each type of growing medium. Maintaining the proper pH level in the nutrient reservoir is most likely the single most critical factor to successful hydroponic gardening. If the pH factor goes too high or too low, the plants will not do well and will show confusing signs or nutrient deficiencies.


Nutrients are a key factor in a successful hydroponic garden. It



Pondering the pH Factor in your Hydroponic Garden

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