Original article courtesy of Maggie Asplet
In 2013, Ernie Lamont, one of the newer members of the Gisborne Iris Group, decided to try his luck growing irises hydroponically. Knowing how little bearded irises like to have wet feet, many of the club members were skeptical about the experiment. But Ernie had been successfully using hydroponics to grow vegetables and other plants for close to fifteen years, so if anyone could give a fair test to the technique, he would be the one.
Ernie's system is located in his greenhouse. He uses materials anyone might have at
hand: old plastic or metal rain gutters and
wooden troughs covered in plastic sheeting constitute the channels. The pots and plants stand in a 50/50 mix of pumice
and pea gravel about two to three inches deep.
The nutrient rich water is pumped up to one end of the channel and runs
downhill into tanks which are low, forming a short waterfall, which puts oxygen
back into the water. The pump starts up
every two hours and circulates the water for 15 minutes, then turns off, and the
water drains back into the tank.
Maggie Asplet lives, gardens, and
hybridizes irises in Gisborne, New Zealand.
She is the Webmistress for the New Zealand Iris Society and a member of
her local iris society. She began with
just six irises from her mother's garden, and she currently grows over 1,000
varieties of TBs, IBs, BBs, SDBs, MDBs, Louisianas and species irises.
Ernie Lamont began growing hydroponic vegetables after
tasting the results on a vacation to Norfolk Island. He became involved in the iris world as a
volunteer for his local iris society, setting up staging areas for iris
shows. His collection has expanded to 70
varieties, with 12 grown hydroponically.