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By Amanda Sylvie
Garden &
Greenhouse Magazine
Do you ever wish your greenhouse or indoor garden was
higher in humidity during the day, fifteen degrees cooler at night, or higher in CO2
levels? Sometimes controlling the atmosphere in a greenhouse can seem like an
unattainable dream! However, as long as you are trying to manage the environment of
an enclosed area, atmospheric controls can make life a lot easier. Good greenhouse
will be reliable, accurate, economical and resistant to corrosive damage in humid
enclosures.
Greenhouse or atmospheric controls can manage humidity,
temperature, irrigation, ventilation, lighting and CO2 levels. These controls are
ideal for greenhouse environments, indoor gardens and atriums, herbariums,
reptariums, vivariums, aviaries, solariums as well as many other environments.
Depending on the environment you are trying to manage, certain elements will be more
important to control than others. When growing orchids, as well as many other types
of plants, temperature, humidity, lighting and air circulation are essential. If
you are utilizing a hydroponic growing environment, CO2 production and monitoring
will yield improved results. Automated controls are the only way to ensure a
productive and dependable environment.
Humidity
Humidity controls
manage the amount of moisture in the air and are ideal for greenhouses or for indoor
gardens that use a fogger, such as an Aquafog 400 or similar product. These controls
easily switch between humidifying and dehumidifying. Humidity control models like
Green Air Product’s RHC-1 or THC manage either relative humidity or total humidity
and may be built with a deluxe piggy-back plug and cord set to attach to a power
source and either a humidifier or a dehumidifier.
A humidistat, such as the
Jaybird humidistat, offers excellent control when humidity requirements are 85% or
lower. Once humidity levels drop about 7% below the set-point, the humidistat will
activate to increase the humidity. We connect a humidistat to a solenoid valve that
opens to activate the misters when additional humidity is needed. Swamp coolers or
evaporative coolers also help to cool the air in climates that typically have low
humidity.
A wireless thermometer/hydrometer with a remote sensor, such as
the LaCrosse Weather Station, provides an ideal method for monitoring conditions in
your growing area. This system allows you to set alarms for temperature highs and
lows, while recording high and low levels throughout the day and night. You can
monitor your greenhouse from the comfort of your home and check the recorded levels
to ensure your plants were comfortable during the heat of the day or the cold of the
night.
Temperature
Temperature controls can manage exhaust fans, air
conditioning, evaporative coolers, or heaters to maintain the ideal temperature
range in your garden area. Controllers such as the Green Air TEMP-H/C models allow
easy switching between heating and cooling systems while keeping the temperature
within a range around the ideal programmed temperature. One of my favorite
controllers, the CT-CT-P maintains different cooling settings for day and night to
produce at least a 15-degree differential by utilizing a photosensor. The Green Air
HT-HT-P maintains different heating settings for day and night. Achieving at least a
15-degree differential is needed by many orchids and other plants to encourage
blooming.
Timers – Cycle & Lighting
Timers are indispensable for
setting up your ideal growing area for plants. A variety of timers are available and
can introduce cycles of day-night, temperature differentials based on the time of
day, misting or irrigation, as well as lighting management.
Cycle timers,
like the Green Air Cyclestat 4P, repeat a selected cycle anywhere from every 5
minutes to every 8 hours. Misting, lighting, air circulation or irrigation can last
5 seconds to 30 minutes, repeating as frequently as needed. Just like the misters at
the grocery store, you can have your misting system spray your plants every five
minutes for 15 seconds. Now if I could just locate a source for the thunderstorm
sound to accompany the misters!
The Green Air Product’s 24-hour cycle timers
offer two options. The first being a 24-hour clock timer with a built-in cooling
thermostat (24-CT-1) to activate the cooling/exhaust equipment when temperature
exceeds your set point. The second type offers dual 24-hour clock timers to control
lighting, CO2, pumps or other timed equipment. For hydroponic systems using CO2
enrichment, the 24-DT-1 can coordinate the functions of the exhaust fan and the CO2
cycles within a 24-hour period to ensure CO2 enrichment does not occur during
exhaust periods.
Sequential timers are very exciting due to the options they
offer. These timers feature adjustable frequency and duration that can be impacted
by photosensors. As a result, the timer can turn systems off during dark periods but
maintain a lighting, misting or CO2 schedule during daylight hours. For example, the
Green Air CST-1SP (Sequential Timer with Solenoid and Photo Sensor), in combination
with a humidistat, can turn on a misting system when humidity drops below 70% in an
orchid greenhouse during daylight hours only. This would provide orchids with the
humidity they require, but not increase their risk of fungal infection or rot by
misting them in the evening/night hours.
Lighting timers are programmable
with multiple outlets and high load capacity to accommodate 120 or 240 volt
requirements often needed by high-intensity lighting. To ensure a lighting timer
will meet your needs, options such as latching relay, temperature override, and high
amperage relay are available on lighting timers made by Green Air Products. Latching
relays minimize the effects of photo-period interruptions in power outages. The
temperature override feature suspends the operation of lighting equipment during
periods when the room temperature exceeds your maximum allowable level. Operation
resumes when the temperature drops to acceptable limits. This feature helps to keep
lighting-related heat from damaging sensitive plants or crops.
Carbon Dioxide
Systems
Researchers have been showing that an increased level of carbon
dioxide can improve the growth, quality and yield of crops as long as the plants
have adequate light, nutrients and water. Many hydroponics and greenhouse growers
have been incorporating CO2 generators or emitters and CO2 monitoring controls into
their growing environments. To achieve ideal results, though, certain conditions
need to be met. Ideally, the indoor garden area or greenhouse needs to reach 1000
ppm (parts per minute) CO2 within 10 minutes. This allows the greenhouse to achieve
ideal CO2 levels after exhausting or venting the area hourly.
Venting or
exhausting the area should occur just before enriching the room with CO2. The Green
Air model CT-DH-4P can coordinate cooling with the CO2 generator (such as model
CD-12) so your system will vent the room and then generate the CO2 needed. The
photosensor on the CT-DH-4P ensures your system will not generate CO2 at night while
the plants are resting. The simplest and least expensive way to monitor CO2 levels
is with Green Air Product’s new Set Point Controller (SPC-1). The SPC-1 samples the
air and maintains the desired CO2 levels.
Multi-Function Systems
It is
not necessary to have six different controllers. Multi-function controllers such as
Green Air’s Micro Climate Controller (MCC-1) can automate all of the major functions
in your greenhouse to include: lighting, heating and humidifying, cooling and
dehumidifying, irrigation and CO2 enrichment. The built-in photosensor, 24-hour
timer and cycle timer help to ensure and maintain an ideal growing
atmosphere.
With all of the time and effort growers invest in nurturing
healthy crops and plants, it is reassuring to know you can indeed manage the
environment of your greenhouse or growing area. By optimizing the temperature,
humidity, light, water and nutrients you can reap abundant crops of healthy,
beautiful plants.
Amanda Sylvie is the owner of Lone Star Orchids and may
be contacted by calling 866.433.8256 or emailing info@lonestarorchids.com. You can
visit her website at www.lonestarorchids.com.
This article was originally
published in Garden & Greenhouse Magazine. Garden & Greenhouse is written for small
commercial growers, hobby greenhouse owners and indoor/outdoor gardeners and is free
to qualified readers. For more information visit
http://www.GardenAndGreenhouse.net.
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