Sailing away- Netcups lost at sea-stop floating away exactly how?

tommyinajar

Well-Known Member
I'm starting everything in hydroton and netcups. I made a small ebb n flow system for them but the cups float away and tip. I was going to hot-glue them down, but that will prevent me from removing the cups, and velcro would hold bacteria. How do you do it? I was thinking about gluing a stainless washer on the bottom.

I know there is an easy $0.02 solution...
 

tommyinajar

Well-Known Member
it's a 2'x3' tray/bin- I could zip em to the sides, but id cut them every time i move or wash tray. Plus middle one would have to be linked to the side.

I might try a big wide stainless screw on the bottom through the res then kinda screw them down. Screws may leak some but it falls below anyway. IDk if it will even work, but that's the best so far...
 

tommyinajar

Well-Known Member
No one else hears "Sailing Away" when their trays flood? You guys have some heavy ass seedlings. There's got to be a TON of trick to keep em anchored, altho' II Yahooed! it and found nadda
 

MrFlatbush

Well-Known Member
I run a flood and drain and have overcome this problem in a couple of ways.

First, try this test to determine the bouyancy of your container....if you fill one of your flood containers with just hydroton and a netcup (no plant), does the cup float when you flood?

If it floats when you flood you might not have enough drain holes in your container. With enough holes your container should not be floating. If you are certain you have enough holes but are still floating your plastic container is too floaty. Find an alternate container. Some plastics are just too floaty, like styrofoam. Sure, you could glue or weld that fucker down but why fight it?

Either drill/melt more holes or switch containers. I use crappy dollar store containers filled with hydroton all of the time with small plants. With the weight of the rocks and enough holes they never float if you have the right plastic.

All of that said, notice I said small plant? A big plant will easily tip a small plastic cup.

I have a solution for that too but it takes a little work.

Ditch the plastic for an actual flower pot, clay pot, ceramic cup, or otherwise cool, heavy, non-plastic container. These pots are heavy and provide a great base for big plants. They won't tip over. They are light proof. If you go to a place like Goodwill you can find any size or shape or level of quirk that you need.......for pennies.

Obviously you need drain holes at the bottom, which can be tricky. If you are handy you can easily cut as many drain holes or slits in the pot as you need. A drill and a diamond hole saw makes this trivial. A set of multiple diameters is less than $10. I do it all of the time. I love flood and drain in awesome porcelain containers. I'm surprised more people don't do it this way.

You can also use one of the super small (1/4" diameter) diamond hole saws to carefully make a bunch of holes around the upper perimeter of the container. This provides solid anchor points if you want to do any LST.

Let me know if you have questions. I do this all of the time.

Best of luck to you!

Flatbush
 

tommyinajar

Well-Known Member
I'm trying to connect it from the bottom somehow to the tank-

I of course overlooked the obvious, weigh it down with a small stainless washer IN the basket.:wall:
DUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUHH :)
 

tommyinajar

Well-Known Member
I actually only have 2 holes , small , where there is an indentation in the plastic. The drain holes on the top, even with the cup water levels. Rest drains thru pump hose. I did like 2 on 22 off. Seedlings grew as big as I wanted.

I think it's slick
 
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