Deep Water Culture Basics - Bubbleponics

Sharing some things I have learned doing Deep Water Culture with cannabis.

Technically what I use is called “Bubbleponics”. First your environmental needs must be met - light, temperature, humidity and air movement all need to be in range for plants to grow well. I will assume you understand these basic concepts. The rules for a good DWC are simple but not very forgiving. Plants respond adversely quickly to something out of range. The good thing is that they will also respond well to a correction quickly. DWC is an everyday task; in fact checking your plants many times a day can keep you ahead of needs.

Two tools that you cannot do without are a good PH meter and a EC meter; both should be equipped with a temperature gauge as well. Maintain them and replace them on the vendor’s schedule.

The five basic components:

1. Water. You could spend a lifetime trying to learn about water for plant growth but let’s keep it simple. Most people can use their tap water as long as the beginning PPM is 200 or less. If your water goes over this you will need to mix it with distilled or Reverse Osmosis water to get it below 200 PPM. Use a float valve and top off bucket to keep the water level in your reservoir consistent even small fluctuations can cause stress. Set the water level 1” – ½” below the bottom of your net pot. Aerate your water for a day or two before you intend to use it. This will help precipitate calcium carbonate out of the water and make it easier to control your PH. I just use my top off tank for this. The perfect reservoir water temperature is 68°F. This is the temperature that water holds the most dissolved oxygen. Do not use copper, brass or aluminum anywhere in your system; not even the tiniest fitting.

2. Air. Roots need air. An aquarium air pump and air stones provide this critical component. I always use two pump/stone combos for redundancy. Losing aeration even for a short period can be problematic. The smaller the bubbles are coming out of the stones the better. I use a UPS battery back-up on my air pumps. The volume of airflow needs to be high enough to saturate the water but not be so violent that the roots are damaged. Smaller bubbles allow more airflow with less violence.

3. Nutrients. Just make this a no brainer. Unless you have a lab and the skills to use it; choose ONE nutrient vendor whose products are built from the ground up for cannabis hydroponics and use their entire line. Do not mix and match. Vendors spend millions of dollars and years developing their products to work with each other. Take advantage of that. Follow their feeding schedule. Change the water/nutrient solution every week – without fail. Learn about Liebig’s law of the Minimum to understand why you are doing this. Look at the Liebig’s Barrel to visualize what we are talking about here. DO NOT MIX NUTRENTS INTO THE RESERVOIR; mix them in a separate container using water that has been aerated for a day or two following vendor instructions the day before the reservoir refresh. Doing this ahead of time will make it much easier to get the PH balanced and stable. A suction pump will be worth its weight in gold to help evacuate the reservoir for a refresh. Many product lines can and should be used at 50% of the vendor’s chart strengths in DWC but not all of them. Do a little research on your chosen brand.

4. PH. PH has absolutely everything to do with the uptake of nutrients into the plant. Let it range from 5.7 to 6.2 in DWC. This will allow the different components to move through the best uptake zones for that nutrient. Check the PH every day even multiple times per day is better. Roots not only take water and nutrients in they also exude substances that can dramatically change the PH in the reservoir in a very short period of time. I am talking hours here not days. Mix PH buffers into some water before adding to the reservoir to prevent burning the roots. Make small changes at a time. One full point is too much (5.2 to 6.2). It takes practice and vigilance to maintain PH in the proper range. PH problems have caused me more issues than all of the other environmental factors combined. The minute you take your eye off this it will bite your plants in the ass!

5. Botanicare HydroGuard. The only additive outside of your chosen nutrient regime I recommend. It is a must have. I would not even buy a bucket before I had this in stock. Root Rot is totally preventable with this. I live where it is not possible to maintain the reservoir temperature below 78°F in the summertime and it has gone as high as 82°F. The ability for water to keep oxygen saturation at that high of a temperature is minimized. Think stagnant pond! I have grown great plants totally root rot free using HydroGuard under these conditions. High temperatures are not the only thing that can cause root problems. Botanicare HydroGuard is a basic component to DWC. I am not affiliated with or compensated in any way for this endorsement by anyone except my happy plants with huge colas.

I have tried several ways to get a plant started. Top feeding seeds planted in small rock wool cubes or Park’s Bio Dome sponges supported in the net pot by PH balanced clay pebbles until the roots get down into the reservoir a couple of inches has worked best for me. Then stop top feeding to prevent crown rot.

So there you have it. Now 10,000 people will take issue with something I have laid out here and I may agree with many of them. I have moved on to growing hydroponically in rock wool cubes because it solves my oxygenation problems associated with high summer reservoir temperatures. I am telling you now that if I did not have heat issues in the summer I would still be growing DWC!
 
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    Bradtd89

    Points: 10
    For anyone who needs a quick refresh in doing DWC or even a fresh new beginner, your post is very helpful. Thank you. I have a similar system myself with the same temp problems where I live.

    VitaMan

    Points: 10
    Fist DWC. Made a lot of these mistakes....and found some of the solutions you wrote about.
I have run Dyna-Gro, and House & Garden successfully in DWC. It does not matter from a PH standpoint what you use. People that claim they just use PH perfect and do not check the PH are just living in ignorant bliss. Yes it is a good product and it does remain more consistent than other brands but the plants exude chemicals from the roots at different stages in their life cycle that can make huge swings in your PH. You need to check PH everyday and multiple times per day is best. You know your going to be looking at your plants anyhow. I have a BlueLab combo meter in my res now. I service it one a month and check PH/TDS several times a day all you have to do is push a button. To run 35 gallons of nutrients plus 35 gallons of top off ~25% strength will be expensive with AN or H&G. not too bad with Dyna-Gro. Do not be tempted to run nutrients longer than 7 - 10 days to save money. If you do not already understand "Liebig's Law of the Minimum" research it. If you go with the Dyna-Gro add H&G Algen Extract and Mammoth P; I had the best results with this in quality and yield. I am seriously considering a run with MegaCrop which would be CHEAP in comparison even to Dyna-Gro. Several top growers here are using it with excellent results. RDWC makes sense in this size grow. Just make sure to use 2" connecting pipe between the grow bins or risk root clogs. We can talk more about this if you decide to go that way. I had every problem you can imagine with RDWC in a poorly designed system. Really expensive but all of the kinks are worked out in this commercially available system from Current Culture - Under Current. I think it is way overpriced but you can use all of their techniques in a home made unit.
Do you keep the combo meter permanently in your reservoir?
If so, you may want to be careful as that meter is not geared for constant immersion.
The Bluelab Guardian is the one for leaving constantly in the reservoir. They also have an upgraded 'Connect' version that can connect wirelessly to a Guardian Bluetooth connector so you can remotely monitor it.
 
Do you keep the combo meter permanently in your reservoir?
If so, you may want to be careful as that meter is not geared for constant immersion.
The Bluelab Guardian is the one for leaving constantly in the reservoir. They also have an upgraded 'Connect' version that can connect wirelessly to a Guardian Bluetooth connector so you can remotely monitor it.
Yes it is in constant immersion. It has the exact same sensor probes as the Guardian.
 
Yes it is in constant immersion. It has the exact same sensor probes as the Guardian.
Well, bollox.
I got the impression from reading their site that it couldn't be used in that way.
If I had realised this, I would have bought the Combo instead of the Bluelab growers' Toolbox which is a similar price range - the Guardian was out of my budget
 
Well, bollox.
I got the impression from reading their site that it couldn't be used in that way.
If I had realised this, I would have bought the Combo instead of the Bluelab growers' Toolbox which is a similar price range - the Guardian was out of my budget
I was in a face to face with the BlueLab rep a while ago at a growers convention held by my local hydro shop. I got the rundown on every product they have. I was trying to get him to get me a deal on a Guardian with Connect. He gave me a PH pen and maintenance kit but no matter what I bribed him with I could not get a deal on the Guardian :dammit:.
 
Coco nutrients are too high in Calcium for hydro DWC. You will have problems with it.
Ah right ok cheers for the reply. Il go to the hydro store tomorrow and buy some hydro nutes. Torn between ph perfect advanced nutrients MHB or spending half the price on GH FLORA and then fixing the ph, but means buying a decent ph meter. I do have one but needs calibration, perhaps il get that done there if possible.
 
Ah right ok cheers for the reply. Il go to the hydro store tomorrow and buy some hydro nutes. Torn between ph perfect advanced nutrients MHB or spending half the price on GH FLORA and then fixing the ph, but means buying a decent ph meter. I do have one but needs calibration, perhaps il get that done there if possible.
Just buy the pH4 and pH7 calibration fluids. They are cheap and go a long way.
If you are doing any DWC, then your top priority should be a good pH pen and TDS/ppm meter. You will seriously struggle if you cheap out on those.
 
Yeah i know, i have one but it’s fairly cheap seems to need calibrating a lot.probably pick up Blue lab truncheon tomorrow
 
Yeah i know, i have one but it’s fairly cheap seems to need calibrating a lot.probably pick up Blue lab truncheon tomorrow
The truncheon is for soil
 
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Ah right ok cheers for the reply. Il go to the hydro store tomorrow and buy some hydro nutes. Torn between ph perfect advanced nutrients MHB or spending half the price on GH FLORA and then fixing the ph, but means buying a decent ph meter. I do have one but needs calibration, perhaps il get that done there if possible.
IMHO the best inexpensive Hydro nutrients is Dyna-Gro, use the entire line. I highly recommend BlueLab I went through several cheapos with lots of PH problems in my grows until I switched. I may be the cheapest grower on this forum and I have learned this is not a place to cut corners. Don't just get a meter get the maintenance kit also and maintain it regularly. Your quality and yields will more than pay for the good tools.
 
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Thanks, will check out the maintenance kit.
 
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