Maximum Yield Australia/New Zealand March/April 2019 | Page 12
No matter what technology we use to
grow, how plants grow will never change.”
from the
EDITOR
TG Toby Gorman
12
Maximum Yield
W
e’re returning briefly to our roots in
this issue of Maximum Yield. Over
the past couple of years, we’ve focused
on the innovation that has taken place in
the indoor growing space. There has been
a lot. From robotic bees to personal food
computers, artificial intelligence to growing
hydroponically in space, how we grow our
food is constantly changing. These days,
indoor farms that employ just a couple of
robots and a cloud-based brain are at the
leading edge of farming.
No matter what technology we use to grow,
how plants grow will never change. The basic
biology remains constant, as do the problems
growers encounter, such as pests, nutrient
deficiency, and pH control.
In this issue, we’re featuring stories that
every grower needs to know, starting with
long time contributor Chris Bond’s article
“Understanding How Roots Uptake Water
and Nutrients” on page 54. As Bond states,
“Most folks know what plant roots are and
have a vague notion of some of the basic
functions they perform. Of course, roots offer
an anchorage system to keep plants in place,
they store food for the plant in the forms of
sugars, starches, and proteins, and roots send
water and nutrients up into the plant. But not
everyone knows just how the root system does
these amazing things.”
There is no better stage in the growing game
to brush up on how roots work than the pre-veg
seedling stage. We’ve got that covered in this
issue, too, with Grubbycup’s article “Caring for
Delicate Pre-veg Seedlings” on page 36.
“After a seed has sprouted — but before
it enters the preadolescence of vigorous
vegetative growth — plants go through
an oft-overlooked and frequently under-
appreciated seedling (pre-veg) stage. While
the time spent in this stage is usually limited
to a week or two, it can be fraught with
opportunities for mistakes by unseasoned
growers and is less forgiving of errors than
mature plants,” says Grubbycup.
It’s never a bad time to revisit some of
the basics.
As always, thanks for reading Maximum
Yield and if you have any questions or just
want to drop us a line feel free to contact us
at [email protected].