Hydroponic to Soil Transplant

by Greg Miller
(Edmonton, Alberta, Canada)

I'm new to hydroponic gardening and I'm trying to understand how you grow plants in a hydro system and then transplant them to soil with out damaging the root system or shocking the plant too much. If I understand hydroponics, the root system would be intertwined in the net cup or plastic cup, dangling in the water solution. How can you dislodge this without damaging the roots? Are there cups that you can get that work in the hydro system and that you can then plant directly into the soil, leaving the roots intact?




Answer: Greg- Hydroponics is any system that somehow delivers water and nutrients simultaneously to plants while maintaining some presence of oxygen within the root zone. This could even mean hand watering, although most systems take advantage of automation (water and air pumps, timers) for a certain degree of convenience.

If you are using a system that involves netted pots, it is best to remove the plants shortly after they have sprouted and started to grow roots. If you wait too long, the root mass will tangle and it will be nearly impossible to remove the netted pot from the plant without killing it. Of course, you could just plant all of the roots along with the netted pot and it will not affect plant growth at all (you simply need to find netted pots cheaply enough to be O.K. with doing this).

Another method would be to use rockwool cubes. They come in many sizes, so you can choose a size that is appropriate for the size plant you are trying to grow (pre-transplant). Rockwool can be watered in any number of ways, with one of the most popular being a hydroponic drip system. When the plants have come to size and possibly are showing some roots out the bottom, simply pop them into the soil wherever you like....just be sure to remove the plastic from around the rockwool cube before you make your hydroponic transplant (the plastic is a root barrier).

Hope this helps, and Happy Growing!

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Hi everyone, Jason from Jason's Indoor Guide here. When I got started with hydroponic gardening more than 24 years ago, my first garden used rockwool cubes and B.C. Nutrients....and I remember thinking to myself yeah, sure, there may be a lot of advantages to gardening with hydroponics, for example there are very few pest problems, therefore very little pest control, no weeding, no plowing or tilling the soil, no soil testing or having to add things into the garden soil, no watering the garden....but for someone who just wants to grow their own vegetables and have more control over their food supply and the quality of the food that they eat, the cost of constantly having to buy grow media and hydroponic nutrients makes this an expensive hobby for most people...


Epic Nutrient Change



I suppose when you take into consideration how much money you save NOT having to buy food at the grocery store, it is surely cheaper to grow your own food hydroponically even with the cost of high quality nutrients. Nevertheless, I didn't have a whole lot of money to work with and I needed to make my efforts as affordable and effective as possible....and in the last 24 years I HAVE learned a thing or two!

As you browse through Jason's Indoor Guide, you will notice all of the systems that I use personally are homemade systems. As I got 3 or 4 years of experience under my belt, I quickly adopted a preference to standing water systems and systems that use expanded clay pellets or lava rock, because the media is re-usable and it eliminates a huge operating expense. So once a hydroponic system is built, garden maintenance is minimal- check and adjust the nutrient solution daily, and to change it completely every 2 weeks....and the biggest operating cost is the hydroponic nutrients. (and the electric bill, lol)...


Homemade Cloner



And, regarding the cost of the nutrients....I experimented for about 3 years with making different compost teas and nutrient teas, but there is still a lot of expense $$$ associated with making high quality nutrient teas....like kelp meal, liquid seaweed, rock dust, bat guano, un-Sulfured molasses, worm castings. You can eliminate a lot of this expense by becoming an expert at making high-quality colloidal humus compost, and use your properly made compost as the basis of your hydroponic nutrient solution.

Unfortunately, I have been gardening for over 24 years and I have only just recently mastered this difficult skill....and even then, only because I happened to find a very easy to follow, high quality technique and decided to follow the instructions to the letter. I produced more high quality compost in just one week than I was able to use in a whole year! If you can master the technique, I highly recommend it. It is one of the top 3 things you can do to increase the productivity of your food production efforts, while at the same time decreasing the amount of effort required to grow all of your own food, and decreasing the total cost of operating your food production system.

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This solution is aquaponics. If you are serious about producing all of your own food and being self-sufficient, this is the ultimate solution for reducing expenses (as much as possible), reducing the total amount of work required, and maximizing the productivity of your gardening efforts. I have been gardening for over 24 years, and it is the perfect food production solution in my opinion.


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Besides mastering how to make high quality compost, learning aquaponics is one of the top 3 things you can do to increase your garden productivity, reduce your total costs, and reduce your total work. The product that I learned from is called Aquaponics4you. With all of my hydroponic gardening experience, the first time I came across the Aquaponics4you product I knew immediately that it was something very special! Place an aquaponics system outdoors and use the sun instead of grow lights, and you have reduced every garden expense to nearly ZERO!



The Same System/ 10 Weeks Later!




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