Quote:
Originally Posted by Token
This is good advice, the person that invented semi-hydro was clearly an inexperienced person and semi hydro has been around for 40 odd years yet nobody questions that it does not really work for exactly the reasons Ray has posted.
|
That comment kind of “got to me”.
1) I
am the guy that “invented” semi-hydroponic orchid culture.
2) S/H works because the physical properties of the medium prevent suffocation.
With any potting medium, when we water, most of the liquid pours right through the medium. Some of it is immediately absorbed by the plant and the potting medium, but there is a third portion that is held between the particles by surface tension.
When using 8-16mm LECA as a medium (that’s a pretty standard size) the size of the void spaces is large, so that “bridging” water can only be in the immediate vicinity of the pellet-to-pellet contact points, leaving lots of open volume. Additionally, LECA is pretty good about “sucking up” the small amount of bridging water, so it will go away relatively quickly, too.
Compact sphagnum moss is pretty much the other end of the spectrum, as the voids in it are so small that they can be
completely filled with bridging water, cutting off the airflow to the roots, suffocating them.
Even a nice, coarse bark mix that started out more LECA-like in its water capturing capacity, will decompose into smaller and smaller particles, resulting in a greater and greater amount of bridging water, and then suffocation.