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Hydroponic farming
Hydroponics is a subset
of hydro culture. This is where plants are grown in water without soil but
using mineral nutrients solutions to substitute for soil. Terrestrial plants
are grown with the roots inside the mineral nutrient solution. They can also be
grown in inert media such as perlite, gravel, wool with minerals, clay pebbles
as well as coconut shells.
This is a relatively
new art of farming in Kenya, although it was first tested in the year 1929 by
William Frederick Gericke of the University of California at Berkeley.
Farmers in Kenya have
been able to adopt the art and are using it mostly to grow fodder for their animals.
Farmers are able to grow fodder which is ready in 8 days after planting. This has
been able to offer these farmers fodder throughout the year. Using this
technology, farmers are able to yield more than 50 kilograms of fodder from a
space of 20 feet by 10 feet. This method is very good for modern day farmers
who have limited space to grow fodder. For example, a greenhouse which is 140 meters
squared can hold up to 1800 trays which can produce approximately 1.2 tons of
fodder per day using between 700-900 liters of water. However, the temperatures
in the greenhouse should be controlled.
Most farmers prefer to grow
grains such as barley, wheat, maize, and oats although barley is the preference
choice of most farmers since it has more protein nutrients which have supper
results to animals.
Advantages of Hydroponic farming
Some of the reasons why
hydroponics is being adapted around the world for food production are the
following:
- No soil is needed for hydroponics
- The water stays in the system and can
be reused - thus, lower water costs
- It is possible to control the
nutrition levels in their entirety - thus, lower nutrition costs
- No nutrition pollution is released
into the environment because of the controlled system
- Stable and high yields
- Pests and diseases are easier to
get rid of than in soil because of the container's mobility
- It is easier to harvest
- No pesticide damage
- Plants grow healthier
- It is better for consumption
Today, hydroponics is
an established branch of agronomy. Progress has been rapid, and results obtained in
various countries have proved it to be thoroughly practical and to have very
definite advantages over conventional methods of horticulture.
There are two chief
merits of the soil-less cultivation of plants. First, hydroponics may
potentially produce much higher crop yields. Also, hydroponics can be used in
places where in-ground agriculture or gardening is not possible.
Disadvantages
Without soil as a
buffer, any failure to the hydroponic system leads to rapid plant death. Other
disadvantages include pathogen attacks such as damp-off due to Verticillium wilt caused
by the high moisture levels associated with hydroponics and over watering of
soil based plants. Also, many hydroponic plants require different fertilizers
and containment systems.