Planting In Aquaponics

Hints and Tips for Planting in an Aquaponics System

620 320 Suburban Farmer

These secret hints and tips will help you make sure you get the plants in your aquaponics system off to the best possible start.

You can grow just about any plant in your aquaponics system, from leafy greens such as lettuce and spinach, to root crops such as carrots and fruiting plants such as tomatoes and strawberries. You can also grow flowers and herbs, or ornamentals such as ferns and palms. Plants can be grown from seeds or seedlings.

Also the growbed isn’t the only place you can grow vegetables in your aquaponics system. You can plant in floating trays on the surface of the water. The only trick here is to plant species that don’t mind having their feet wet (roots submerged in water full time). Lettuce is a great example.

If you are planting into a new growbed it is advisable to plant seedlings rather than seeds, as they are able to start extracting nutrients straight away. After your system has aged 6 months and already has some established plants it is fine to start planting with seeds.

Seedlings

To prepare the seedlings, submerge the seedlings in a bucket of water mixed with 4 capfuls of liquid seaweed. As the seedlings are likely to be stressed by the planting process, the liquid seaweed plant tonic acts as a stress buffer giving the plants their best chance when settling into their new environment. Give the seedling a good wash in this solution and wash away any soil from the roots. The plants are then planted directly into the filter.

Note: You don’t have to strictly wash away all the soil from the roots of the plants. If the soil washes away easily, great! If the roots are holding onto the soil just give the roots a quick massage and see what drops away. It is better to plant a seedling with roots full of soil rather than pick its roots apart trying to remove soil.Planting Seedlings in Growbed

To plant the seedlings, support the roots and stem of the plant in one hand while making a hole in the expanded clay with the other. Push the seedling into the clay to a depth of about 5cm and cover the roots, be careful not to smother the plant with clay.

Liquid seaweed (or worm wiz) can continue to be added as a foliar spray to give your plants a boost. Dilute 2 or 3 capfuls in a 9 litre watering can and apply weekly if your plants look like they need it. Once the plants look established limit liquid seaweed application to once every 6 weeks.

When deciding on what vegetables to grow, it is important to plant seasonal varieties that thrive in the current climate. A struggling out of season plant will provide no benefit to the system.

Plants in your growbed really only compete for sunlight and root space so structure your plantings so that large or tall plants (tomatoes, corn) are grown on the far side of the growbed (so that they don’t shade smaller plants). Plant vines such as watermelon and cucumber on the perimeter of the filter, allowing them to grow out of the growbed conserving much needed filter real estate.

Planting Seedlings

Also as the plants do not compete for water or nutrients you can plant in much higher densities than in the ground. Anytime you see a bare patch of expanded clay plant in a new plant or seed.

 

Structure your plantings so that you always have at least half of the growbed growing plants. Plant fast growers such as beans and cucumbers alongside slow growers such as tomatoes and corn. When the fast growers have expired, replace them with slow growers and when the slow growers have expired replace them with fast growers. By keeping half the bed planted you ensure you always have plants taking nutrient from the water. Plants in their growing phase are the most benefit to your fish farm system as in the growing stage plants are at their most hungry for nutrients.Growbed

A newly setup aquaponics system won’t have a build-up of organic matter to hold the expanded clay together, so you might find that top heavy plants blow over easily in strong winds. So it’s important to stake these with stakes attached to the outside of the filter (don’t push stakes into the expanded clay media) – and don’t use treated wooden stakes.

Ras Mark Suburban Farmer