Hydroponics How To

Hydroponics How ToYou’ve heard how fast plants grow in a hydroponics system. You’ve heard about the huge harvests. Once you have it set up you will only need to spend a small amount of time per day monitoring the plants.


Did you know that hydroponics can also be easy and cheap to get started? There are five types of hydroponics systems, and this ebook will show you why matching the right system to your situation can save you a lot of frustration.



Plants grown in hydroponics have their roots in a neutral media such as clay balls or perlite. A nutrient solution is circulated through the roots with a pump or wick action. The plants don’t have to waste energy developing a root system because the roots are surrounded by nutrients. Since it no longer has to search for its food, the plants growth and energy are redirected to foliage, flowers and fruit.


My name is Stella. I have 11 years experience with hydroponics, and a little later I will explain my bizarre introduction to this easy way to grow plants. But first…


If you are thinking about getting involved with hydroponics you need to answer these three questions:


This e-book will take you on a journey, almost like going down a garden path, and help match the right system to your situation.


Obviously, you know that plants need light to thrive, but don’t you want a lighting system that will fit your situation and fit your budget? There are a number of different ways to get the right amount of light to your plants. This e-book will show you where the deals are and also what to watch out for. Lighting can be the single greatest expense… And a critical component.


Certainly you knew you would have to do something to keep the plants going. If there were shortcuts that would make maintenance so much easier, would you use them? There are two main things to monitor to ensure a huge harvest.


I learned to love gardening during my own back-to-the land adventure in rural Louisiana in the 1980s. There on 5 acres, I raised two children, two horses, two dogs, a goat and some chickens.


Over the next decade, I tried it all…. a square foot garden, a french intensive garden, many large traditional plowed gardens, mulberry bushes, pineapple patches, muscadine grape vineyards; I’ve canned pickles, home brewed beer and made orange wine. I baked bread from scratch, made home-made butter, froze green beans and canned tomatoes.


It was wonderful growing our own fresh fruits and veggies. But the reality of it is, it took a ton of hard work and perseverance to fight the bugs and the weeds! Crop production and quality was always inconsistent… dependent on the soil, the weather, and the pest invasions.


Eventually, life events intervened, as they always seem to do, and by the 90s, I found myself divorced with 2 kids, and living in the city. My Mother Earth Adventure was but a fond distant memory.


My lightning inspiration came at the most unlikely place, Disneyworld! My partner Simon and I visited Epcot Center at Disney World in Orlando and toured the "Living With the Land" exhibit. This is an awesome hydroponics project in action.


The secrets experienced hydroponic gardeners use to Turbo-charge plant growth. Use any of these secrets and your plants will grow faster than your neighbors. Use them all and you’ll be bringing home ribbons from the fair.


What does car repair have to do with hydroponics? When the clutch went out on our Toyota, my husband decided to replace it himself. He is handy so I thought it would be a good way to get the car fixed. He bought the parts needed for the job but thought he could save money by doing the work without a repair manual.


When he finished the job, he had a few bolts left over. One of them was for the rear engine mount. The engine shifted and caused the drive shaft to lean against the catalytic converter. After the spinning shaft had ground a hole in the converter, it started spewing fumes from under the car. However, the most embarrassing thing about this car is it now sounds like a Hot Rod because the converter has a hole in it.


Average price per pound in supermarket: $2.99 Total supermarket price: $89.70


In the above example a family of three is buying 30 pounds of tomatoes, lettuce, peppers and radishes every month at their local grocery store. The quality is very uneven but they usually spend almost $90 for produce- every month! If they were growing their own, they would be saving over $70 every month the garden was in production! In addition, they would have some of the biggest, tastiest vegetables every day.


You saw the Table of Contents. You saw how packed with information this e-book is. It consists of 315 pages of information and step-by-step plans. If you’re the type of person that takes action once your mind is made up, wouldn’t this e-book help you create a bountiful garden in a very small space? When you get this $35 ebook you will get:


Information on all aspects of hydroponic growing including chapters on: Lighting Fertilizer Pests Plant Media


Just follow the step by step directions and in a matter of weeks you will have huge plants that will feed your family. Those plants will be giving you fresh produce and saving you money every month.


You will be able to grow crops at a fraction of the price it would cost to buy them. Won’t your friends be impressed when you give them samples of your harvest?


Hydroponic kits cost a lot of money but this ebook will show you how to create the same thing for hundreds of dollars less. The money you save by using ordinary materials to create a hydroponic setup will pay for… Read more…