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Susan Slobac avidly pursues hydroponics gardening and has experimented with numerous hydroponics systems. In this article she covers the details on deep water culture, aeroponics and other hydroponics systems.
By Susan Slobac | Published 1/17/2008
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As with any type of indoor gardening method, hydroponics gardening requires the use of grow lights in order for the plants to be able to synthesize food, grow, and reproduce, producing flowers or fruit.
By Susan Slobac | Published 11/20/2007
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With a little advice and a few tips to get you started, it is pretty easy to grow vegetables, fruits and flowers indoors even in the depth of a bitter winter when you choose hydroponics gardening as a hobby.
By Susan Slobac | Published 11/19/2007
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Indoor hydroponics gardening allows you to grow plants throughout the year and without using soil. If you are interested in this form of gardening, there are a few things you will need to know. This article will...
By D Swain | Published 10/19/2007
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Hydroponics gardening has many variables, including the space available, your budget, how much time is available to spend on maintenance and your choice in grow lights. There are some tips that will help to make your hydroponic experience pleasant and productive.
By Susan Slobac | Published 9/20/2007
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The Waterfarm 8-Pack Drip Hydroponics System is ideal for growing different sizes of plants. Many of them are of the view that the hydroponics is suitable only for small plants.
By The Great Reviewer | Published 9/11/2007
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Hydroponics gardening becomes more and more popular these days. Some consider it miraculous. But what is hydroponics gardening after all? How does this system work? Why is it considered more convenient and more successful than classic gardening (geoponics)?
By Maria Markella | Published 8/7/2007
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If you are a gardener who wants to garden but has obstacles to overcome in terms of soil and climate, why not give hydroponic gardening a try? Hydroponics is a method of gardening in which you grow plants without using any soil.
By Susan Slobac | Published 7/19/2007
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A look into hydroponics and the many ways you can do it. Explained simply, so easy a child can do it, and probably has in school by the frist grade.
By Shaman Mahoney | Published 3/14/2007
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A plant being grown without soil is hydroponics. The name is derived from two Greek words; Hydro and Ponics. Literally translated, it means: "Water Labor." Hydroponics allows the plants to receive nutrients directly from their roots, rather than through the soil.
By Jason Elliot | Published 2/10/2007
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An articles explaining the pros and cons of hydroponics vs. soil growing plants.
By Agaric | Published 2/1/2007
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LED refers to light-emitting diode. A diode has two terminals, and it allows current to flow in one direction and not in another.
By Susan Slobac | Published 12/24/2007
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Learn how to set up a simple inexpensive hydroponic system. You can grow vegetables even when the ground is covered in snow and ice.
By jenjen | Published 11/28/2007
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Open House at Miller's Tomato Basket in Stuarts Draft, Va. a way for Fall visitors to sample a real taste of Shenandoah Valley life.
By Hank Zimmerman | Published 10/9/2007
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There are references to the cultivation of plants directly in water in Egyptian records dating back to the time of the New Kingdom and the "Woman-King," Pharoah Hatshepsut around 1460 BCE.
By Susan Slobac | Published 9/25/2007
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Growing plants without soil
By Marilyn Wright | Published 8/2/2007
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Hydroponic gardening is a great way to grow pure food, even if you have no soil, or unusable soil, in which to grow plants.
By Susan Slobac | Published 7/11/2007
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This is a listing of 10 videos that I like that I have chosen to share with you all. These videos carry all different types of aspects from fun, to sad to entertaining to educational. I hope you enjoy!!
By Margo Prior | Published 4/24/2007
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Did you know that you can still grow your own beautiful flowers and vegetables, without having to spend many hours every week looking after your garden? We're all busy, and we all have lives outside the garden, but we don't want to neglect our duties.
By Charles Thompson | Published 2/1/2006
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The grow lights you choose for hydroponics gardening affects plant growth in several different ways.
By Susan Slobac | Published 1/15/2008
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When it comes to hydroponics and indoor gardening, having the appropriate lighting system will be a big key to the success or failure of your garden.
By Susan Slobac | Published 11/27/2007
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Correct maintenance of your hydroponics equipment will help ensure its long life, thereby saving you money.
By Susan Slobac | Published 7/18/2007
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Hydroponic gardening is a great way to grow plants in areas that could not otherwise sustain plant growth. One of the most important and costly pieces of equipment you will buy is a lighting system for your hydroponics garden.
By Susan Slobac | Published 7/18/2007
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Hydroponics is merely growing plants without the use of soil. A variety of hydroponic gardening techniques exist, and nearly any plant can be grown with hydroponics, which are healthier and of better quality.
By Nikki Phipps | Published 8/31/2006
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Grow lights are used in indoor gardening to replicate natural sunlight as closely as artificial lights possible. The trick is to find the most cost-effective solution that provides the correct level and type of lighting for your indoor plants.
By Susan Slobac | Published 2/4/2008
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Metal halide lamps create fantastic lighting under which plants thrive. They are small grow lamps that produce a lot of light, and are more efficient to run than either incandescent or fluorescent light bulbs.
By Susan Slobac | Published 2/1/2008
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The Aerogarden Pro 100 with Gourmet Herb Seed Kit is a practical solution to those who live in the apartments and would like to have an indoor garden. This is a blessing for those who do not have large stretch of land and patience to cultivate herbal garden in the backyard.
By The Great Reviewer | Published 1/11/2008
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For less than $20 you can build a counter top garden that requires no direct sun light.
By Curtis Carper | Published 11/15/2007
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These are great ways to help your gardens grow better then ever, and also cheap alternatives to improving your growing.
By B.Ware | Published 11/9/2007
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Epcot, the experimental prototype community of tomorrow, opens up with Spaceship Earth. This huge white sphere has become the traditional icon of Epcot, and its location in the center of the Illuminations World Showcase Lagoon is home of...
By Aura | Published 11/2/2007
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LED Grow lights are another example of a small thing that can make a great difference. If you are growing your own food hydroponically, you're already taking a step toward saving the planet.
By Susan Slobac | Published 10/1/2007
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Deep water culture (DWC) is a type of hydroponic gardening in which the roots of a plant are suspended in a solution of oxygenated water and various nutrients.
By Susan Slobac | Published 9/25/2007
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Cocnut coir is an increasingly popular organic planting medium that has many advantages over traditional peatmoss, vermiculite, and compost.
By J. E. Davidson | Published 9/5/2007
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Hydroponic gardening is a great way to garden indoors if you do not have arable land suitable for gardening. If you are going to be gardening indoors, you will want to garden efficiently, in order to get more produce from your hydroponic garden.
By Susan Slobac | Published 7/13/2007
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Hydroponic gardening is one of the most popular methods for plant production. This form allows people with no land, or land unsuitable for plant growth, to produce food and flowers with ease.
By Susan Slobac | Published 7/11/2007
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The urban multi-story farm is posed to replace much of the present farming methodologies.
By Clark Richards | Published 6/30/2007
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Officers removed 1,264 marijuana plants from the man's house on Saturday. Although this is a significant bust, it does not rival one of Minnesota's largest marijuana busts that took place about eight years ago in which more than 4,000 pot plants were seized.
By Sussy | Published 6/20/2007
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A non-profit environmental group has called for New York City to set up rooftop greenhouses so as to greatly improve its self-reliance in food supply and reduce pollution caused by transporting food.
By Z. Perry | Published 6/8/2007
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How do cherry tomatoes in the dead of winter sound to you, a gardener in a northern clime wishing for summer?
By Susan Slobac | Published 6/2/2007
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People always love more of a good thing, and perhaps this is one reason why gardeners find variegated plants so popular.
By Susan Slobac | Published 5/27/2007
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Vegetable and flower gardeners love to get a jump on the spring planting season by starting their own plants from seed.
By Susan Slobac | Published 5/27/2007
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You might not think of shrubs as a top pick for a plant to grow indoors, but actually there are several beautiful shrubs that will thrive and provide much color to your home. The key to success with growing shrubs indoors is to give them adequate artificial light.
By Susan Slobac | Published 5/26/2007
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At long last a decent science fiction movie to talk about!
By Lee Alon | Published 4/19/2007
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Gardening catalogues are an excellent way for gardeners to purchase anything their heart desires or anything their garden requires without ever leaving their home. Gardening catalogues offer a wider variety at a cheaper cost with less hassle involved.
By Smith Johnson | Published 4/6/2007
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If you travel without making many plans, you will have more unique memories to tell people about back home. A brain is a better camera than a Canon. In this travel memoir, I tell about a bad experience that was enjoyable for me.
By Scott Feldstein | Published 12/7/2006
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Many people think about growing their own organic fruit, but few ever do. Now is the time with your own home made hydroponic system.
By Scott Laniak | Published 3/29/2006
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Some time, very likely within the lifetimes of most people reading this, people will live on the Moon. At first, the lunar settlers will be scientists. Later, the scientists will be joined by businessmen and entrepreneurs. Then will come the tourists.
By Mark Whittington | Published 11/29/2005
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How are hydroponic tomatoes grown in Hawaii?
By George Furukawa | Published 3/5/2005
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