Auto Watering Plant Nursery by CanfieldsFarm
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 This is a cheap and great way to grow a bunch of seedling in a small space.
I use a "windowed in" porch.
  You will need
Tubing/garden Hoses
Sub-Pump  (i used a 500 watt made for dirty water)
Shelving
Outlet Timer
Plastic Bottle Caps
Hot Glue Gun lost of glue sticks
A awe on any sharp pointed thing you can use to poke holes in.
Scissors Sharp enough to cut garden hose.
A plastic barrel the size depending on how much tubing your going to need
trays as big as the shelves if they are not solid to catch water
Seeds
Seed starting containers
Potting soil

 
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Step 1: Step One: Arrange Your Shelving

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 I used a couple of different kinds of shelving there was 2 cheap plastic ones that came apart, and put them out in front of the window,  Then took a metal 3 tiered shelf and put it in the adjacent window.
   The plastic shelves i drilled a hole into, and at the bottom they are linked with a drainage tube, into a smaller bucket.
     Under the metals shelving i put a big plastic tray, i got  these from a pizza shop that was going to throw them away.
     MAKE SURE THE SHELFS HAVE ENOUGH SUNLIGHT, the place i set this up at has a lot of sun, So i did not set up any addition lighting here.


drdunc1000 says: Jul 2, 2012. 5:13 PM
You might be interested in my blog about the automatic watering system I have developed. It is based on an Archimedes coil for lifting water. I have used it to start seeds, grow plants in my living room windows, flowers on my patio, and vegetables in my community garden plot
http://drdunc1000autogardens.blogspot.com/
drdunc1000 says: Jul 30, 2012. 10:05 AM
I have updated the blog site with a video of the plumbing of the AutoGardens. I have abandoned the Archimedes coil and now just use a siphon hose from my toilet. The float valve at each tray is a pinch valve made from a floating piece of styrofoam and a piece of PVC squeezing a short length of rubber tubing.
QuestionConvenience says: Sep 27, 2012. 4:47 PM
your site is VERY interesting! keep up the good work!
BlackSmoke says: Apr 25, 2010. 12:01 PM
not to be a jargon nazi, but the little vertical pump you show is probably a sump pump, for pumping out basements. i would add that they are easily available at most hardware stores as well.
CanfieldsFarm (author) says: Feb 19, 2011. 6:50 PM
yes you are a jargon nazi
sub is short for submersible pump thats what this is, this is not a sump pump,
atlantica says: Jan 15, 2012. 8:50 AM
Just to join in the reich then...
its an Awl, not an awe. I think most can figure out what you meant but it might help the ones who get lost at that point.
lucek says: Apr 25, 2010. 7:23 AM
gives me an idea.
I've go a water timer I picked up for $20 last year. if I attach that to a spicket on a 55 gallon drum I could have this system gravity fed.

or if someone was really inclined a hose valve a servo and a moister probe and wire the thing in to a computer.
eecharlie says: Apr 25, 2010. 4:36 PM
There are actually very simple mechanical valve systems that implement your last idea, using the evaporation of the last bit of water in the tray to set the timing. For example,

futuregarden.com/hydroponics/smartvalve.html

Note that that product doesn't take care of pumping water back up. But since it gives the plants just enough water, a single gravity-fed supply should be rationed out with no runoff.

Someone should totally do an instructable on a DIY version of that valve which is more customizable.
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