Classroom 01

Building Infrastructure & Equipment

From open-field rows to sterile tissue culture labs, explore the full spectrum of growing infrastructure. Learn to design, build, and optimize systems at every scale.

9
Topics
All
Scales
Topic 01

Outdoor Rows of Plants & Irrigation Systems

The most fundamental growing infrastructure begins with well-planned outdoor rows. Whether you are cultivating kava shrubs, blue lotus, or medicinal herbs, row spacing, soil preparation, and irrigation design determine yield and plant health for decades to come.

Row Layout & Spacing

Plan row orientation for maximum sun exposure. Typical spacing ranges from 4-8 feet for shrubs to 15-25 feet for tree species like tropical botanicals.

Drip Irrigation

Delivers water directly to root zones through emitters, reducing waste by up to 60% compared to overhead sprinklers. Ideal for arid climates and water-conscious operations.

Overhead Sprinklers

Impact or rotary sprinklers cover large areas uniformly. Best for establishing new plantings and foliar feeding, though less efficient than drip for mature rows.

Fertigation Integration

Combine fertilizer delivery with your irrigation system using injectors or venturi devices. Precise nutrient control at the root zone maximizes uptake and reduces runoff.

Detailed irrigation design guide coming soon - covering pipe sizing, pressure calculations, and zone layout.
Topic 02

Terraced Land with Stone Edges & Massive Planters

Terracing transforms sloped terrain into productive growing platforms. By cutting level benches into hillsides and retaining them with stone, concrete, or timber, you prevent erosion, manage water flow, and create microclimates ideal for diverse botanical collections.

Cut-and-Fill Terracing

The classic method: excavate the uphill side and use that soil to build up the downhill side. Requires proper compaction and drainage behind retaining walls.

Stone & Block Retaining Walls

Dry-stacked natural stone or engineered block walls. Include weep holes every 6-8 feet and a gravel backfill layer for drainage. Walls over 4 feet may require engineering.

Massive Planters & Containers

Concrete, corten steel, or cedar planters 3-6 feet across create self-contained growing zones. Perfect for controlling soil composition per species on terraced platforms.

Water Management

Terrace drainage channels, French drains behind walls, and swale collection systems prevent waterlogging while capturing runoff for reuse in lower tiers.

Full terrace construction walkthrough with material calculations and slope analysis - coming soon.
Topic 03

Raised Beds

Raised beds give you complete control over soil composition, drainage, and root depth. They warm faster in spring, drain more freely, and let you garden without compacting the growing medium. Build them from untreated lumber, galvanized steel, or masonry blocks.

1

Choose Location & Size

Select a site with 6+ hours of direct sun. Standard widths are 3-4 feet so you can reach the center without stepping in. Length is flexible; height of 12-24 inches suits most botanicals.

2

Build the Frame

Use rot-resistant materials: cedar, redwood, galvanized steel panels, or concrete blocks. Avoid pressure-treated lumber near food or medicinal plants. Corner brackets add structural integrity.

3

Layer the Soil Mix

Bottom third: coarse material for drainage (wood chips, gravel). Middle third: compost and aged manure. Top third: premium potting mix or native loam blended with perlite and worm castings.

4

Install Irrigation & Mulch

Lay drip lines or soaker hoses before planting. Cover with 2-3 inches of organic mulch to retain moisture, suppress weeds, and regulate soil temperature year-round.

Material cost comparisons and soil recipe formulations for different botanical species - coming soon.
Topic 04

Aquaponics Systems

Aquaponics merges fish cultivation with soilless plant growing in a closed-loop ecosystem. Fish waste provides organic nutrients for plants, and the plants filter the water that returns to the fish. It uses up to 90% less water than conventional growing and produces both botanicals and protein simultaneously.

Media Bed System

Grow beds filled with expanded clay (LECA) or gravel. Uses flood-and-drain cycles controlled by bell siphons. Best for beginners and diverse plant types including herbs and medicinal species.

Deep Water Culture (DWC)

Plants float on rafts in nutrient-rich water channels 12-18 inches deep. Highly scalable for commercial operations. Excellent for leafy botanicals and fast-growing herbs.

Nutrient Film Technique (NFT)

A thin film of nutrient water flows through narrow channels. Roots hang in the stream. Low water volume but requires reliable pumps and backup power for continuous flow.

Fish Species Selection

Tilapia thrives in warm climates (75-85F) and tolerates variable water quality. Koi and goldfish work for ornamental setups. Channel catfish and trout suit cooler environments.

System Type Complexity Best For Water Use
Media Bed Beginner Mixed botanicals, herbs Very Low
Deep Water Culture Intermediate Leafy plants, commercial scale Low
NFT Advanced Herbs, microgreens Very Low
Complete aquaponics build guide with plumbing diagrams and cycling instructions - coming soon.
Topic 05

Greenhouse Structures

Greenhouses extend your growing season, protect plants from weather extremes, and allow precise environmental control. From simple hoop houses to fully automated glass structures, the right greenhouse design depends on your climate, budget, and the botanicals you grow.

Hoop House / High Tunnel

Galvanized steel hoops covered with 6-mil greenhouse poly. Most affordable option per square foot. No heating required for season extension in zones 7+. Typical lifespan: 4-year poly, 15-year frame.

Gable / A-Frame

Classic peaked roof design sheds rain and snow efficiently. Built from aluminum, wood, or steel. Allows maximum headroom for tall tropical species. Excellent ventilation options.

Polycarbonate Panels

Twin-wall or triple-wall polycarbonate offers superior insulation (R-1.5 to R-2.5) compared to single-pane glass. Virtually unbreakable, lightweight, and diffuses light evenly to reduce hot spots.

Climate Control Systems

Automated ridge vents, exhaust fans, evaporative cooling pads, and thermostat-controlled heaters. Target ranges: 65-85F for tropical botanicals, 50-75F for temperate species.

Greenhouse sizing calculator, ventilation formulas, and covering material comparison chart - coming soon.
Topic 06

Aeroponics Setups

Aeroponics suspends plant roots in air and delivers nutrients as a fine mist. Originally developed by NASA for growing food in space, this method uses the least water of any growing technique and produces rapid root development with exceptional oxygenation.

1

Build the Root Chamber

Construct a light-proof enclosure from food-grade plastic or PVC. Root chambers must be completely dark to prevent algae growth. Use net pots with neoprene collars in the lid to hold plants.

2

Install Misting System

High-pressure aeroponics uses pumps at 80-100 PSI with misting nozzles that produce 5-50 micron droplets. Low-pressure systems use standard pumps with sprinkler heads - simpler but less efficient.

3

Configure Timers & Sensors

Mist cycles typically run 5 seconds on, 3-5 minutes off. Cycle timers with seconds-resolution are essential. Add pH and EC sensors for automated nutrient monitoring and adjustment.

4

Maintain & Monitor

Clean nozzles weekly to prevent clogging. Monitor root health for signs of drying (mist cycle too long) or root rot (too frequent). Keep nutrient solution at 65-72F for optimal uptake.

High-pressure vs. low-pressure aeroponic system comparison with parts lists - coming soon.
Topic 07

Indoor Growing (HPS / LED Lighting)

Indoor cultivation gives you total control over photoperiod, temperature, humidity, and CO2 levels. The choice between High Pressure Sodium (HPS) and LED lighting technology is one of the most consequential decisions in indoor growing, affecting yield, energy costs, and plant quality.

Specification HPS LED
Efficiency 1.0-1.7 umol/J 2.5-3.0 umol/J
Spectrum Fixed (warm yellow-orange) Tunable (full spectrum)
Heat Output High (requires cooling) Moderate (heatsink-cooled)
Lifespan 10,000-24,000 hours 50,000-100,000 hours
Upfront Cost Lower Higher
Operating Cost Higher (more watts, bulb replacement) Lower (energy savings 40-60%)

Photoperiod Control

Most botanicals thrive on 18/6 (veg) or 12/12 (flower) light schedules. Tropical species like kava prefer consistent 12/12 to mimic equatorial conditions. Use digital timers for precision.

PPFD & Light Mapping

Target 400-600 umol/m2/s for vegetative growth and 600-1000 for flowering. Use a quantum meter to map light distribution and adjust fixture height to achieve uniform canopy coverage.

Environmental Integration

HVAC, dehumidifiers, CO2 injection, and oscillating fans work together with lighting. Match cooling capacity to heat load. Supplement CO2 to 1000-1500 ppm under intense light for maximum photosynthesis.

Room design calculator covering watts per sq ft, BTU cooling requirements, and electrical load planning - coming soon.
Topic 08

Cloning Plants

Cloning produces genetically identical copies of a parent plant through vegetative propagation. For botanical operations, cloning preserves elite chemotypes with specific alkaloid profiles, ensures uniform crops, and accelerates production timelines compared to seed-grown plants.

1

Select the Mother Plant

Choose a vigorous, disease-free specimen with the desired traits: alkaloid content, growth habit, pest resistance. Keep mothers in vegetative state under 18+ hours of light.

2

Take Cuttings

Use sterile, sharp blades to cut 4-6 inch stem sections at a 45-degree angle. Include 2-3 leaf nodes. Remove lower leaves and dip cut end in rooting hormone (IBA or NAA based).

3

Root in Propagation Environment

Place cuttings in rockwool cubes, peat plugs, or a cloning machine with aeroponic misters. Maintain 75-80F, 90%+ humidity under low-intensity light (T5 fluorescent or gentle LED).

4

Harden Off & Transplant

Once roots reach 1-2 inches (typically 7-14 days), gradually reduce humidity over 3-5 days. Transplant to final growing medium under normal light levels. Avoid transplant shock with gentle handling.

Cloning Machines

Aeroponic cloners suspend stem cuttings above a reservoir with misting nozzles. Roots develop in 5-10 days with near 100% success rates. Low-cost DIY builds use tote containers and pond pumps.

Sanitization Protocols

Sterilize all tools and surfaces with 70% isopropyl alcohol or 10% bleach solution between cuts. Clean cloner reservoirs weekly. Contamination is the leading cause of clone failure.

Species-specific cloning protocols for kava, blue lotus, and other woody botanicals - coming soon.
Topic 09

Tissue Culture

Tissue culture (micropropagation) is the most advanced propagation technique, growing plants from tiny explants on sterile nutrient media inside controlled laboratory conditions. A single mother plant can produce thousands of identical, disease-free clones. This is how commercial nurseries scale rare or difficult-to-propagate botanicals.

Laminar Flow Hood

HEPA-filtered workstation providing sterile airflow. Essential for contamination-free transfers. DIY builds start around $300; commercial units run $1,500-5,000. The single most important equipment investment.

Media Preparation

Murashige and Skoog (MS) media is the standard base. Supplemented with plant growth regulators (BAP, NAA, IBA) at precise concentrations. Autoclave at 121C for 15-20 minutes to sterilize.

Stages of Micropropagation

Stage 0: Mother plant preparation. Stage 1: Initiation (explant establishment). Stage 2: Multiplication (shoot proliferation). Stage 3: Rooting. Stage 4: Acclimatization to ex vitro conditions.

Growth Room Setup

Temperature-controlled space at 25C (+/- 2C) with 16/8 photoperiod from cool-white fluorescent or LED. Shelving units with adjustable light heights. Air filtration to minimize contamination pathways.

1

Surface Sterilization

Wash explants in running water, then soak in 70% ethanol for 30 seconds followed by 10-20% commercial bleach (sodium hypochlorite) for 10-15 minutes. Rinse 3x with sterile distilled water.

2

Explant Transfer

Working inside the laminar flow hood, trim the explant to 0.5-1 cm and place on initiation media using flame-sterilized forceps and scalpel. Seal vessels with parafilm or autoclavable caps.

3

Subculture & Multiply

Every 4-6 weeks, transfer growing shoots to fresh multiplication media. Each subculture can double or triple shoot numbers. Maintain careful records of multiplication rates and media formulations.

4

Root & Acclimatize

Transfer shoots to rooting media with auxin (IBA). After root development (2-4 weeks), carefully wash agar from roots and transplant to sterile potting mix under high humidity. Gradually reduce humidity over 2-4 weeks.

Complete tissue culture starter kit list, media recipes for kava and blue lotus, and troubleshooting contamination - coming soon.