Indoor Container Gardening Guide

Indoor Gardening Pictures Section


 


Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on Indoor-Container-Gardening
Email:
First Name:


Main Indoor Gardening Pictures sponsors


 
Container Gardening Secrets - Effortless Ways to Grow Vegetables Using Gardening Containers
Container Gardening Secrets - Effortless Ways to Grow Vegetables Using Gardening Containers
by Infinite garden
7 Secrets to Your Successful Indoor Herb Garden (Your Herb Garden)
7 Secrets to Your Successful Indoor Herb Garden (Your Herb Garden)
by John Green
Growing Herbs Indoors : Your Guide To Growing Herbs In Containers For A Vibrant Indoor Herb Garden
Growing Herbs Indoors : Your Guide To Growing Herbs In Containers For A Vibrant Indoor Herb Garden
by Lee Anne Dobbins
Water Gardening In Containers: Small Ponds Indoors & Out
Water Gardening In Containers: Small Ponds Indoors & Out
by Helen Nash C. Greg Speichert
Used from: $3.70

Herbs in Pots: A Practical Guide to Container Gardening Indoors and Out
Herbs in Pots: A Practical Guide to Container Gardening Indoors and Out
by Rob Proctor David Macke
Used from: $1.65

P. Allen Smith's Bringing the Garden Indoors: Containers, Crafts, and Bouquets for Every Room
P. Allen Smith's Bringing the Garden Indoors: Containers, Crafts, and Bouquets for Every Room
by P. Allen Smith
Our Price: $13.00
Used from: $7.35

Container Gardening: The Complete Practical Guide to Container Gardening, Indoors and Outdoors
Container Gardening: The Complete Practical Guide to Container Gardening, Indoors and Outdoors
by Stephanie; Mchoy, Peter Donaldson
Used from: $2.50

 

Welcome to Indoor Container Gardening Guide

 

Indoor Gardening Pictures Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.

Using Hydrogen Peroxide in your Hydroponics Gardening System

from: Jason Willkomm





There are no doubts about the benefits of using hydrogen peroxide properly in a hydroponics system. This becomes especially true if your nutrient reservoir is kept above 72 degrees. Warm water holds less dissolved oxygen, and therefore encourages the growth of more viruses, fungi, and anaerobic bacteria. Hydrogen peroxide adds oxygen to you water and cleans the water of pathanogens. Benefits include healthier root systems, increased nutrient uptake, thicker stems, and bigger leaves.



One expert claims it should be used on all soil gardens as well as in hydroponics sytems. Knowing as much as I do about beneficial fungus and micro-organisms and the benefits they provide to living plants, I am shy in taking this advice. However, when this first line of defense fails and plants become sick I often resort to using hydrogen peroxide treatments on my soil grown plants.



The chemical formula of hydrogen peroxide is H2O2. You may notice it is simply water with an extra oxygen atom. In fact, as hydrogen peroxide breaks down in a solution the result is oxygen and water. Its application helps deliver oxygen to over watered plant roots and helps to sterilize the growing media by killing harmful anaerobic (not oxygen compatible) bacteria and pathanogens that cause disease. This includes bacterial wilt, pythium fungi, fusarium fungi, and others.



I avoid using the common 3% hydrogen peroxide you normally find at drug stores. This is because such low percentage solutions are unstable, and chemicals are added to the peroxide to keep it from breaking down before it can be used. I did a little research because I did not know what chemicals were used for this, or if the plants uptake these chemicals, or if there was a health risk associated with any of these stabilizing chemicals.



Hydrogen peroxide is usually stabilized with acetanilide. Acetanilide is a synthetic compound that was first used for its fever reduction and pain killing properties in the late Nineteenth Century. For many years it was utilized as an alternative to aspirin to treat various ailments, but large-scale medical use stopped when the toxic side effects of consuming acetanilide became apparent. This was enough to make up my mind to use 35% hydrogen peroxide instead.



Firstly, 35% peroxide is caustic and should be treated with the same caution as a strong acid. 35% strength hydrogen peroxide should be readily available at any quality hydroponics supply shop. The stronger concentrations do not use the added stabilizers.



The recommended dosage is to add 2-3 ml to each gallon of water, however, I use 5 ml per gallon and have never had any problems. At every nutrient change treat your fresh water with hydrogen peroxide. The general idea is to let the hydroponics sytem circulate the hydrogen peroxide solution for about a half hour to let the peroxide work against pathogens and to let the solution stabilize before adding your nutrients.



The beneficial effects of using hydrogen peroxide last about 4 days. There are some gardeners who add a little peroxide to their nutrient reservoirs every 5 days in between nutrient changes. If you decide to do this, stick to the guidelines and always make sure your solution is thoroughly mixed before exposing your plants roots to it. Another option is to top off your nutrient reservoir with peroxide treated water whenever it is low.



The original article with pictures and additional info can be found at http://www.jasons-indoor-guide-to-organic-and-hydroponics-gardening.com/using-hydrogen-peroxide.html



Copyright Jason Willkomm - http://www.jasons-indoor-guide-to-organic-and-hydroponics-gardening.com/







 

Indoor Gardening Pictures News


 

Warning: fopen(./cache/indoor-gardening-pictures.html) [function.fopen]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /home/spiritra/public_html/indoor-container-gardening/datas/pages.php on line 95

Warning: fwrite(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/spiritra/public_html/indoor-container-gardening/datas/pages.php on line 96

Warning: fclose(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/spiritra/public_html/indoor-container-gardening/datas/pages.php on line 97