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You can garden all year ‘round (even in the winter)! Hydroponics sounds complicated, but it just means growing vegetables in water instead of soil. The benefits are: no weeding, no pests, and great yields. Learn the basics of hydroponic gardening for beginners—and how to get started!
What is Hydroponics?
The word hydroponics comes from the Greek for “working with water” and is a method of growing plants without soil. You grow plants in nutrient-rich water instead of nutrient-rich soil, using the same organic amendments in a liquid form.
This can be done outside during warm weather OR indoors year-round. Once you’re set up, hydroponics is actually easier than typical gardening, and plants grow faster!
One of the greatest things about hydroponics is that it can be done in a tiny space—a balcony or terrace, a small yard, the rooftop of an apartment building, and even indoors. Since it’s a self-contained system, a hydroponics setup can be scaled to any size you like (bearing in mind the weight of the water) to provide for yourself, a friend, or your family.
Here are some of the many benefits of hydroponics:
no weeding
fast growth
high yields in a small space
no critters stealing crops
clean vegetables
ease of harvest
consistent quality
no soil-related insects or diseases
portable systems
Considering how much you want to spend, the plants you want to grow, and how high-tech you want to go, there are many options to choose from. Research and choose the right method for you and your space to avoid making costly mistakes.
Active Vs. Passive Hydroponic Systems
There are many different types of hydroponic systems, but most are considered to be either active or passive. An active system uses pumps to circulate the water, while a passive system uses gravity to move the liquid or employs a wicking material to draw water up to the roots.
Whether active or passive, most home hydroponics are closed systems that recirculate the nutrient solution through the system again and again, saving water. In an open system, the water is not captured and reused.
Media-based Systems
Although you can grow plants solely in water, for large, heavy plants like tomatoes, it helps to support the plant roots in the form of a growing media.
Many types of inert growing media can be used to hold roots in place. Common substrates include sand, gravel, polyethylene fiber, pea stone, coconut fiber, perlite, vermiculite, clay pellets, glass marbles, and rock wool.
To keep the growing media moist, one of the following setups is typically used:
A wick system, one of the most basic media-based methods, works like a self-watering container. Pieces of cotton or nylon rope conduct the aerated nutrient solution—via capillary action—from a reservoir sitting below the plants to the growing medium above, passively supplying moisture to the plants. This works best for plants that don’t require a lot of water, such as herbs like rosemary, thyme, and oregano, as well as quick-growing microgreens and deep-rooted plants like beets or radishes.
An ebb-and-flow or flood-and-drain system can be either active or passive, depending on how much work you want to do. It supplies the roots with water at regular intervals, usually several times daily, and then lets it drain away. You can do this manually by catching the water at one end of the system in a bucket after it has drained through the media and pouring it back in again at the opposite end of the system a few hours later. This type of system can easily be automated by using tubing and a submersible pump attached to a timer to move the water, turning it into an active system.
Drip systems are also active. They supply a constant water flow to each plant through a drip line. The excess water eventually seeps down to a reservoir underneath the planter and is recirculated by a pump back through the dripline again.
Liquid-based Systems
Liquid-based systems don’t use any type of growing media to support the plant roots. Instead, the plants are suspended in net pots or other holding structures with their roots exposed to a nutrient solution that has been aerated with an aquarium-type air pump.
The nutrient film technique (NFT) constantly supplies a thin film of aerated nutrients to the plants via a system of slanted horizontal troughs. Plants are set into holes along the top of the troughs, and nutrients are pumped to the high side of each trough and flow via gravity to the low end, where they are pumped through the loop again.
In deep water hydroponic systems, plants hang with their roots in a nutrient solution. For a raft-type method, Styrofoam sheets float on the water’s surface. Holes cut into the Styrofoam support the net pots and keep them from sinking into the water. The plants grow with their roots submerged in an aerated nutrient solution below the raft. This is a great method of growing lettuce, herbs, and other lightweight crops that won’t grow heavy enough to sink the raft.
Water Quality & Fertilizers
Since water is the most important element in hydroponics, have yours tested before you begin. Chemicals found in city water can be harmful to your plants, and high concentrations of mineral salts can affect the fertilizer balance.
Though you can mix your own, there are both organic and chemical fertilizers made specifically for hydroponic growing systems. Some are specially designed for growing leafy crops, while others are formulated for growing flowers and fruit. Using garden fertilizers intended for use in soil won’t yield the desired plant growth and can clog up tubing and fixtures.
A slightly acidic solution (5.5-6.5) is optimal for plants to make the best use of the available nutrients, so test the pH of the solution regularly.
To prevent the nutrients from becoming too concentrated, add water to keep the level of the solution steady and change the solution regularly to keep it fresh. Remember that different plants have different needs, and you may have to adjust your nutrient solution accordingly.
Plants for Hydroponic Systems
If you buy plants to use in your system, wash the soil from the roots to ensure that you don’t bring in any soil-borne diseases. One of the joys of hydroponic gardening is that by eliminating soil you don’t have a lot of disease problems to worry about. Good sanitation practices will help keep your system trouble-free.
Fast growth rates for many crops like lettuce, chard, arugula, and other greens prevent pests from becoming established.
If you are growing your own plants from seed, you can start them in peat pellets, cubes of rockwool, or in plug trays filled with a soilless mix. Transfer them to your hydroponic system when the roots have grown through the bottom of the plug.
Pollination becomes an issue when growing fruit-bearing plants indoors. In an outdoor garden, tomatoes are wind-pollinated. To simulate that indoors, run a fan or tap and shake the vines when they are in bloom. Look for self-pollinating varieties of cucumbers that bear all female flowers.
D-I-Y or Buy?
It’s easy to build your own basic hydroponic system using a plastic storage container as a reservoir, an air pump to aerate the nutrient solution or a submersible pump to circulate the liquid, and growing media or net pots to support the plants. For those experienced in working with PVC pipe, many space-saving configurations can be constructed to hold the plants and convey the water from one end to the other. (Lots of plans can be found online.)
If you are not that handy, the simplest thing for the beginner (even though it may be more expensive) is to purchase a kit or a ready-to-plant set-up. These can range in size from a simple drip planter to a PVC pipe garden or grow tower complete with pumps.
Unless you are growing in a greenhouse, additional lighting will also be needed to get the 12-14 hours of light daily for good growth. Depending on what you are growing, this can be a basic LED grow light, which works for lettuces, greens, and herbs, or high-intensity discharge (HID) lamps for flowering and fruiting plants.
Start Small!
Start small with easy-to-grow crops such as lettuce or basil and work your way up to more difficult crops as you gain confidence. Once you get your feet wet, hydroponic growing can be a rewarding alternative to traditional gardening!
If you’ve tried hydroponics in the past, share your tips in the comments below!
I have been experimenting with different methods over the years. Tried and failed, had success with simple milk jugs and water pump systems. I am interested in trying the wick and clay pebble methods next. I have a vertical pump tower coming the end of this month for lettuce growing. Thanks for the info and ideas. You always have great content to read and amazing recipes to cook.
I’ve been reading this page for growing tips and am so happy to see an article on hydroponics, of which I’ve been experimenting since September. Still living and producing are my zucchini, indeterminate tomato, bell pepper, basil, and broccoli plants. I started very simple using 2 gallon buckets I found laying around, mason and spaghetti sauce jars, tomato cages, net cups, coconut coir plugs, clay pebbles, water soluble nutrients, and seeds. The most expensive things were the grow lights of which I now have four (LED 100W each), but I am growing in a spare bedroom with a North facing window so the lights were a must. I’m basically using the Kratky/modified DWC (deep water culture) method with no aeration or circulation of the nutrient solution. I refill the reservoirs as needed and use milk jugs to mix the nutrients. So far it is working well. I am a novice gardener so there has been a learning curve with every plant, but the experience is so rewarding! Important to note, keep the light out of the water reservoirs by covering with tin foil or painting black to keep algae from robbing the plants of nutrients. If using lights, LEDs are definitely the way to go as they are very energy efficient and do not put off much heat. With my four lights, I currently have the aforementioned survivors plus romaine, arugula, strawberries, watermelon, and cucumber with room for some snow peas that I plan to start soon. The lights are hung from an old photographers backdrop stand and can be raised and lowered as needed to match plant height. I’m not a very handy person, so the hardest part of this project was rigging the lights to the pole so that they could operate independently and stay evenly spaced (solved using hair ties) and cutting out holes for the net cups in the bucket lids using a box cutter (3” net cups fit perfectly if you use the inside ring from a wide mouth mason jar as your template). Learning to grow vertically and being sure to provide proper support has also proven to be a must. Being able to snip off fresh veggies and take them straight to the table has been just the coolest thing and my family loves it!
I would really like it if you could supply name of company where you qot that kind of flat top squarish tubes at the beginning photo. I don't even know where to begin to look, but I like them. Thank you
Hi Robin, thoroughly agree, start simple! Our family started a few years ago with the commercial "Aero Garden" brand of hydroponics. You certainly can't get any simpler than that and we've slowly worked our way up to bigger and better systems. We've enjoyed lettuce throughout the winter and the hydro's are our primary source for herbs. Have been working on "successive" planting to not be overwhelmed with produce. Hydroponics offer a wide range of options and I close with reiterating, start simple.
I had some questions about hydroponics and didn't know how to ask or phrase them, this article taught me so much about an alien subject. Thank you for being thorough without a mass of confusion!