Does Music Affect Plant Growth?


When I saw people were searching for this on Google, I just had to write a post about it.  Below is an excerpt from Suite 101 about Early Research on Plant Growth and Music.

Early Research on Music and Plants

Dorothy Retallack, a researcher at the Colorado Woman’s College in Denver, published her work on music and plants in 1973 in the book The Sound of Music and Plants. In one experiment, Retallack found that plants thrived when she played a tone intermittently, but died when she played the same tone constantly. In another experiment, she found that plants grew better when she played “soothing” music on the radio, whereas rock music affected plant growth negatively.

Another of Retallack’s experiments sought to discover what kind of classical music plants liked best, finding that plants exposed to North Indian classical music leaned towards the speakers, while plants exposed to the modern, dischordant classical music of composers such as Schoenberg leaned away from the speakers — but not nearly as much as the plants exposed to harsh rock music.

Read more at Suite101: Does Music Affect Plant Growth? http://www.suite101.com/content/does-music-affect-plant-growth-a282993#ixzz1D7pmfkaJ

Isn’t that interesting?  I didn’t find the study report, just the reporter’s view on it, but nonetheless, its interested to hear a scientist make claims like this.

Does Music Affect Plant Growth?

What do you think?

You could try your own experiment or research more about the topic.  I figured it would be insignificant gains at best, but anything is worth a shot!  Here is a link to a experiment you can do yourself.

Leave your results and thoughts in the comments below.  I can’t wait to hear what you have to say!

Grow Room Ventilation Made Easy


-General rule of thumb: 400CFM exhaust to 100CFM intake.  Play with these numbers to see how the temperatures and air flow change.  I suggest hanging digital thermometers in various locations and heights in the grow room.  There are thermometers that also tell you the min/max temperatures from the day.  Knowing those temperatures allows the grower to understand how their daily temps are fluctuating.  Indoor grow boxes are much more efficient when they are running cool.

-Clean Green Tip:  Clean grow rooms are happy grow rooms.  Use carbon filters on exhaust fans and HEPA filters on intake fans.  Use gas duster cans to spray away any dust on fan blades.  Spider mites love to live in dust and travel through the air.  Avoid spreading a spider mite infestation with a little preventative pest control.

80mm PC Exhaust Fans
PC fans are great for small grow box ventilation and circulation.

There are a few different ways to ventilate your grow room depending on the size.  Small PC grow boxes, and any box roughly 2’x2’x4′ could be ventilated with PC fans or one small ducting fan.  Small bathroom exhaust fans would work but may be too loud for the application.  A closet grow room will need a 4″ or 6″ inline ducting fan.  The inline fan can ventilate the room and clean the air with a carbon filter.  If you are using metal halide or high pressure sodium light bulbs you will want the inline fan to push the air through air cooled hoods.  Below is an example.

2 ducting holes for air flow.
The hot grow lights are cooled in this hood. The white ducting is the entrance for the air that is coming from the inline fan. The air is pushed through the shiny duct and to the outside of the grow box.
The grow light setup
It is essential to cool hot lights in some way. You will notice healthier plants and great results!

Key to indoor gardening: Experiment with everything to see what works in your grow room.

If you understand the principles behind the practices – you will be able to make things work with what you have.  Try using a bathroom exhaust fan as the grow room exhaust.  Bathroom fans are rated with CFM just like inline fans.  They practically work the same.  Control the flow of air with quiet insulated ducting.  The noisy vibrations will certainly get annoying.  Look for more posts in the future about ventilation and grow room air circulation.

Click Here to read about the 4″ Inline Fan with Carbon Filter on Amazon.com

How to Create a Grow Room: Indoor Grow Closet


Indoor Grow Closet
This grow tent is air tight and opened with a zipper. Inline fans exchange the old air with fresh air from the outside environment.

The first step to creating a grow room is a plan.  Growing plants indoors can be tricky and you want to plan what you are going to use to achieve your goal.  Without a plan you will build a random grow room built for just growing plants indoors.  Depending on the plant you are growing, you may want different things in your grow room.  You will want to plan the type of hydroponics or drip system you are going to use.  Draw out every component of your planned Grow Tent.

Start with the frame.  How do you plan on creating a frame for your environment.  You will want an enclosed chamber.  Air tight and light tight are the goal.  Water proofing is MANDATORY. Water proofing your grow room set up will protect your house from taking heavy water damage and allow you to see any spills or leaks in your hydroponic system.  Your frame will also need to support the weight of your grow light and the heavy hood that comes with it.  You will also want to hang fans and filters from the frame so make sure you use a sturdy material.

Grow Closet Frame
The arrows point to the PVC pipes that connect to make the frame of the grow box.

Different materials will suit the needs of different growers.  The grow closet in the pictures uses 1 inch or thicker PVC pipes for the frame.  Wood and braces can construct a very sturdy grow box.  If you are going to have a lot of weight hanging from the walls and ceiling, wood will be a good material choice for the frame.  For PVC frames you will just use PVC joint connections to bring the pipes together.  You can use PVC glue, epoxy, or industrial strength tape to secure the connections.

The walls are made of black and white poly.  Black and white poly is similar to mylar on a roll but is usually cheaper.  The black and white poly is overlapped at the connection points.  Sewing the pieces of black and white poly and sealing

Grow Closet Frame
The arrows point to the joins connecting the top of the frame together. The frame is a cube so the same connections are used in every corner.

them with duct tape seems to produce a decent seal at a very low cost.  Cheap hydroponic grow boxes are hard to find, but making your own can save you quite a bit of money for a sacrifice of time.  You could also use a giant tarp to create the walls of the box, but black and white poly already reflects light.

Doors are a tricky part to building a grow room.  This is where a good plan will come in handy.  Building a wooden door is simple with the right tools.  You can cut a square hole in a wooden board to create a door frame.  Add hinges and a board that will cover the hole and you have a simple door.  To make a simple door in mylar or black and white poly you can get a tarp zipper.   The tarp zipper is meant to be sewn to the right and left sides of where the door is supposed to be.  To open the door you simply unzip the zipper.  Refer to the picture.

Grow Tent Door
The blue part is sewn to the walls and the white is the zipper door.

Once you have an enclosed grow room, you will need to ventilate it and create air circulation.  Powerful inline fans can push air through ventilated grow light hoods and air filters.  If your grow room is air tight, an exhaust fan should create negative pressure, drawing air from any cracks or holes in the walls.  Its important to draw the air out of the room by pulling air through filters before it enters or exits the grow space.  Carbon filters will remove any odors before they leave your grow room.  HEPA filters will filter out dust, pests, and mold through your intake fan.  Small grow tents will not require an intake fan if

Powerful Inline Fan
Inline fans are connected to ducting to push air through desired paths.

the temperature is low enough.  A good rule of thumb is a 4:1 exhaust/intake ratio.  That means 400 CFM(cubic feet per minute) exhaust for every 100 CFM intake.

Next hang your grow lights and the necessary accessories.  Hang your thermometers and preventative pest control gear.  You should be nearing the completion of your grow closet.  You will have to make a few minor tweaks to get exactly what you want.

Grow Room Electrical Set Up
The arrows point to the hole in the grow tent where cords enter/exit and the outer surge protector the cords plug into.

TIP: Run all of your electrical components to the outside of your grow tent.  Make a small hole for plugs to get to the outer environment.  If your cords do not reach from the inside of your grow room to the outside, you can run them to the top of the frame.  Secure a surge protector up on the wall so that it cannot be possibly touched by water.  Run the plug of the surge protector to the outside of the grow box so you have no electrical components exposed to any potential water damage.  Protect yourself and your investment!

I’ll be posting more tips and guides on grow room/grow box building in the near future.  Sign up for the RSS feed on the side bar or subscribe via email below because you won’t want to miss them!  If you have questions about building indoor grow rooms, please spark up the conversation below!