In reading about air pots and other new container designs that indicate that what you really want is a slew of lateral feeder roots instead of some kind of macho tap root that just wants to get longer.....
If this is so, how does one accomplish this in a container? How to prevent the tap root from gobbling up all of the nutrients so it can mindlessly circle the container at the expense of actually nourishing the stuff above ground.
I understand that in nature, the plant just wants to reproduce and is not interested in providing us all with a bountiful harvest; just enough to procreate and she will be happy. This would explain its propensity to invest heavily in a robust anchor/tap root so she can survive to fertilization, flower, and seed?
But I want more....
I'm imagining a DIY airpot for all roots: some how getting air to the tap root,at the proper stage, so it shuts itself down, releasing that energy to develop more feeder roots and the glorious plant above ground.
So here goes: hot-glue a 3 - 4 inch pot upside down to the 5 (or more?) gallon container. The small pot would have holes drilled in its bottom (now its top) to allow light to pass thru the bottom of the big container (that also has a hole directly below) if there is an airspace between the big container and the ground. Meanwhile, the actual grow container sides have also been modified for air pruning of the laterals so that more of these roots develop.
Any thoughts?
If this is so, how does one accomplish this in a container? How to prevent the tap root from gobbling up all of the nutrients so it can mindlessly circle the container at the expense of actually nourishing the stuff above ground.
I understand that in nature, the plant just wants to reproduce and is not interested in providing us all with a bountiful harvest; just enough to procreate and she will be happy. This would explain its propensity to invest heavily in a robust anchor/tap root so she can survive to fertilization, flower, and seed?
But I want more....
I'm imagining a DIY airpot for all roots: some how getting air to the tap root,at the proper stage, so it shuts itself down, releasing that energy to develop more feeder roots and the glorious plant above ground.
So here goes: hot-glue a 3 - 4 inch pot upside down to the 5 (or more?) gallon container. The small pot would have holes drilled in its bottom (now its top) to allow light to pass thru the bottom of the big container (that also has a hole directly below) if there is an airspace between the big container and the ground. Meanwhile, the actual grow container sides have also been modified for air pruning of the laterals so that more of these roots develop.
Any thoughts?