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The Power Within (deccanherald.com)
On the island of Unst in the UK is one of the world's greenest houses, a 'zero carbon' home powered ...

Home Grown (Greater Houston Weekly)
The Bayou City Farmers' Market in Upper Kirby has barely been open for an hour on this Saturday morn...

U-Pick-It Farm: Alternative to High Prices (tampabays10.com)
The owners of Hydro Harvest Farms want everyone in the Bay area to know that their farm is a one sto...

 
 

 

Hydroponics Today

 

Hydroponics' time has come - agriculture without soil. In a time when we are looking for safe and nutritional fruits and vegetables, free of pesticides and fresh all year long, hydroponics has a lot to offer the home gardener and the greenhouse producer. Hydroponics Today is a collection of articles on what is new and happening in hydroponics throughout the world and in your community.



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The Hydroponic Garden--A Guide to Hydroponics
Hydroponics allows us to grow the plants, fruits and vegetables of our choice--even in limited space--without using soil. It's an amazing way to produce perfect specimens and offers TONS of advantages that traditional gardening can't come close to touching!

Urban Farms Grow & Sell Fruits and Veggies in the City (philly.com) (06 Jul 2008)
Greensgrow Farm is a little bit country and a lot urban. Situated on the reclaimed - and cleaned up - site of a former steel-galvanizing factory in Kensington, the nonprofit organic farm grows a wide variety of produce, including heirloom lettuces, peppers and tomatoes, and also acts as a crop clearinghouse for small farmers from South Jersey to Lancaster County. "I want to ensure the supply line between rural producers and urban consumers," said "chief farm hand" Mary Seton Corboy. Greensgrow was co-founded 10 years ago by Corboy, a former chef with a master's degree in political science who had little agricultural experience but definite ideas about the good an urban farm could accomplish: The enterprise aims both to shorten the distance from farm to city table and to educate the public on the importance of buying fresh and local.

1974 Newton Grad Hopes to Reinvent the World One Solar Panel at a Time (njherald.com) (04 Jul 2008)
It works on a multilayered aquaponic system. A fishpond holds water and nutrients that are pumped into a 15-foot, space-age steel arch with a coconut-fiber mat growing surface. The water is then channeled back into the fish pond, where it is purified by microorganisms. The water pumps are powered by solar panels and wind turbines. Everything is recycled, and it's efficient -- as little as 10 percent of the water required for normal gardening would be needed -- and even that could be provided by bathwater or from other normally unusable sources.

Interest Grows in Hydroponics (Leader Times) (25 Jun 2008)
Randy and Leona Slama started growing their own lettuce after their daughter had a skin reaction to store-bought and organic varieties. The red oak leaf and romaine lettuce the Slamas grow in their Shay, Kittanning Township, greenhouse is done hydroponically -- in a nutrient-infused water solution -- making it safe from potential contaminants such as insects and animals. "It's very controlled," Randy Slama said. "You don't need pesticides, you don't need herbicides, there's no weeds."

Shoppers Browse Island Farmers Market (BradentonHerald.com) (24 Jun 2008)
"Hydroponics will be the way of the future," said Norm Whitlow, who brought a selection of heirloom tomatoes, green peppers and Swiss Chard grown on his farm in Palmetto. Since February, he and his wife, Kathy, have grown several varieties of heirloom tomatoes using hydroponics - foam growing pots containing crushed coconut shells, not soil. Shoppers find them delicious.

Home Grown (Greater Houston Weekly) (23 Jun 2008)
The Bayou City Farmers' Market in Upper Kirby has barely been open for an hour on this Saturday morning and this is Pole's first time as a seller. He doesn't even have a sign up. But he does have a plate of freshly sliced heirlooms with a shaker of sea salt on the table. Just one juicy taste, and the line gets longer. Timora Pole is busy weighing produce and bagging the ripe veggies, while Ed Pole makes change as fast as he can. No one leaves the line with less than a pound of tomatoes. The Poles, like many growers, started out as hobbyists. Their Humble home sits on a half acre at the end of a cul-de-sac, complete with a greenhouse Ed Pole has fitted with his own hydroponics system.

Self Sufficient Life
Learn about keeping And raising chickens and poultry, growing your own fruit and vegetables, herbal remedies, how to build your own greenhouse, and hydroponic gardening. Today, hydroponics is used in a variety of settings. Wherever soil is unavailable, hydroponic gardening seems to appear. Wildcatters on offshore oilrigs grow their own tomatoes. Cooks on nuclear submarines hydroponically grow vegetables to use in there crew's meals. Right now, plants are growing on orbiting space stations without a single grain of soil.

North American Greenhouse Hothouse Vegetable Growers Association Announces "Certified Greenhouse" Program (Yahoo! News) (19 Jun 2008)
In light of recent food safety issues such as the tomato salmonella scare, the NAGHVG wants customers to know that "Certified Greenhouse" vegetables such as tomatoes, bell peppers and cucumbers are grown indoors according to standards that include food safe, controlled hydroponic production and sustainable indoor growing practices.

At Epcot, Hydroponics and Mickey Mouse Pumpkins (CNET News.com) (14 Jun 2008)
One of the lesser-known secrets of the theme park is its "Behind the Seeds" tour, an hour-long walking tour of the site's sustainable greenhouses and fish farming operations. The purpose behind the project--which was the very first attraction at Epcot--is partly to provide fresh produce and fish to Epcot's many restaurants. But as Tiffany Sterrett, the biotech intern who led the tour explained, "It's also for demonstrating things that could be done (in agriculture), and what could be used in cities and warehouses." Essentially, she continued, the idea is to showcase how to grow great food in places where there is poor soil or no soil. The vegetables and fruit growing in the greenhouses, in fact, aren't planted in soil at all, but use entirely hydroponic methods. Here, a tomato plant hangs down from a rotating rack, its roots having just emerged from a system in which the roots are sprayed with a nutrient mix as the plant glides along the track.

Tomato Shortage Isn’t Bad News for Everyone (The Mining Journal) (14 Jun 2008)
While many restaurants and grocery stores are putting up signs alerting customers that tomatoes will not be available on sandwiches and salads until a national recall has ended, some businesses are seeing a brighter side. Farmer Q's Market on Washington Street in downtown Marquette is one of the few that still has the familiar red fruit on the shelves. "We are totally still selling tomatoes," said Susan Brian, the owner of the market. "We do have tomatoes from out of state, but they are hydroponic and not from the areas that have the warnings."

The Great Indoors (The Sydney Morning Herald) (14 Jun 2008)
Vertical gardens are helping turn sick office space into a breath of fresh air. Those lucky enough to have sipped a pre-flight G'n'T in Qantas's first class lounge at Sydney International Airport couldn't have failed to notice that several of the interior walls are growing. Called "greenwalls", the vertical gardens cover 280 square metres and feature 8400 plants, a living wall of ferns and flowers that, in the words of the horticulturist Mark Paul, "not only soften what might otherwise be a fairly hard environment, but make an appreciable difference to air quality". The lounge gardens are one of a hundred or so greenwalls installed by Paul's Sydney firm, Greenwall Company, in the past six years. "Demand is definitely on the increase," he says. "In the beginning the biggest jobs were under 10 square metres: now they can be up to several thousand square metres. Most people put them in because they are pretty green fixtures, but people are slowly realising their potential for cleaning air."

Welcome to Thanet Earth: The Biggest Greenhouse in Britain Unveiled (Evening Standard) (11 Jun 2008)
You've heard of the factory chicken. Now meet the factory vegetable. Grown in their millions in trays of nutrient-enriched water inside a heated, artificially-lit greenhouse large enough to house ten football pitches, they are as far as you can get from 'natural' home-grown food. But this week, workers are putting the finishing touches to Britain's largest hydroponic greenhouse - an astonishing construction in white steel and glass. By the time the site is complete in 2010, another six massive greenhouses will have been constructed, providing a home to more than 1.3million tomato, pepper and cucumber plants - grown hydroponically, without soil.

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