urbanfog
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- Apr 7, 2011
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I used four foot high "hog wire" in a five foot circle lined with a road fabric an underground contractor had left over. The fabric has 1" holes. Some soil leaked out but became stable. Had roots everywhere in the pot. View attachment 340024 those are my black panther guard cats. I also have wooden troughs two feet deep four feet across and on the slope a fence with the same road fabric to hold the soil in( in background of photo)
If you never move your plants they work OK... But as soon as you scooch them at all the root ball gets damaged. They need 4x the amount of staking/support that a nursery pot needs. We just started calling them dumb pots.
Have done the side by side years ago when smart pots first came out. It wasn't even a compition. If I need more O2 in my root ball I'll amend my mix. I don't let them get bound until they hit the 35 gallon tubs. Then they can circle all they want in there.Try one side by side with your nursery pot. I think the difference is in the oxygen's access to the roots. Check out the roots. I think you will find the roots fill the pot where the nursery pot will be root bound at the bottom.
A lot of factors, each will have to decide what's best for them.
For me the best move is to NOT pay $30 (or more) per container.
Have done the side by side years ago when smart pots first came out. It wasn't even a compition. If I need more O2 in my root ball I'll amend my mix. I don't let them get bound until they hit the 35 gallon tubs. Then they can circle all they want in there.
A lot of factors, each will have to decide what's best for them.
For me the best move is to NOT pay $30 (or more) per container.
Yeah Sea, I was kinda just responding in general to the Smart Pot sales guy. I always used landscape fabric, but seeing some good geofabric online has me thinking it's worth a few extra dollars a roll. The concept is simple, if root grows out to impermeable wall, it will head down and circle, if it grows out of bag and dies, it will branch more (kinda like it does if you put it in a big 6ft hole)....So it is really just how you deal with that reality given your indoor constraints, like WW said a big tub does fine.
Problem I always had with breathable pots was living in the land of 20%-30% humidity, then dry out faster than they should (unless your sealed or humidified). And we shouldn't forget this isn't a weed driven technology. It's a tree farmer technology that was adapted for weed growers. Tree farmers use it because they can grow the same 6 ft tree for sale in a smaller rooting area, so when the load the truck in Oregon and drive it to New York, they can fit more trees on the truck. Increase $$, or decrease expense (depending how you look at it).
They sag over time and as mentioned above are a total bitch to move.
I'm done with fabric for sure. Used them for the past few years and am using them right now. DONE.
Plastic or even better clay. The stability is priceless.
I used these pots for a year or so and loved them. The only problem I had was that I grow on flood tables and it would make a bit of a mess. I went back to fabric pots and the yield etc. was similar without the mess. I still have about 100 of those square 1 gallon so I might eventually give them another run.1-Gallon Square
172 cu. in 6"X6"X6"
I still love these RootMaker 1 gal square pots.. I have pulled 6 oz from one plant.. PurpleWreck in my 600watt closet.. 36 inches x 28 inches.. 2 to 3 plants at different stages.
this way Dirt last me forever and so do Nutes.. Still on the first bottle of Age Old.
I mix up moonshine mix minus the dry Nutes. It was the cheapest way with the best results.
Cant really over water with these but you do have to water every day.
Had 3 gals and they were just too large for what i do.. if i had multiple 1000s i would have 5 gal or 3 if i was wanting to grow some massive plants.
Best to order online...
the Big Tomato Bro's told me they no longer make them... since they didnt have them instock. lol fuck that place...
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