Garden & Greenhouse November 2018 Issue | Page 22

Perfecting Nutrient Delivery Through
Fertigation
Nutrient management can get tricky, even for the most seasoned
grower. Finding the ideal nutrient delivery method may involve some
degree of trial and error, but there a number of factors that can help
growers narrow down what nutrient delivery method makes the most
sense, based on their crop needs.
Fertigation, which is a combination of the
words fertilization and irrigation, is the process
of adding water-soluble nutrients into an
irrigation system. Fertigation can be accomplished
in three ways, by hand, using a dilute tank or
an in-line injection system.
Hand-Feed Only When Necessary
Hand-measuring nutrients and water is not only
tedious, it also carries a high rate of error. It’s quite
common for growers to overdose or under dose
fertilizer and incorrectly distribute it. One mistake
can devastate yield and force growers to begin the
growing cycle from scratch. However, it’s important
to note that when plants require a pesticide or a
cleanser, hand measuring is perfectly acceptable, as
manually dosing pesticides or cleanser greatly helps
in avoiding unnecessary damage to the plant.
Micro dosing, or the act of constantly spoonfeeding
small amount of nutrients to soil-based
crops, is another part of fertilization that growers can
overlook. Will Kacheris, who’s helped many growers
implement automated fertigation systems at GrowSpan,
explained, “Micro dosing is an important part of
a commercial operation where certain yields and distinct
properties of plants are expected by the buyer,
think of a certain color flower, therefore nutrients
must be precisely delivered to the plant.”
He continued, “Additionally, and probably most
known, is that micro dosing significantly reduces fertilizer
cost and waste instead of spreading it through
an entire area, usually doing nothing but feeding
weeds.”
Although micro dosing may become timeconsuming,
growers at least won’t have to bother
with temperature or moisture adjustments in order