About Antonius Lecuona

I studied agriculture at the University of Stellenbosch in South Africa in 1984 and completing my M.Sc Agric. in 1998. . My love for "Controlled Environmental Agriculture" (CEA), started in my third year when I was exposed to the Welgevallen Research Station. There Prof. P.C.Maree showed us what hydroponics consisted of. It was awesome. There were no large tractors involved, no dusty fields, no uncontrollable storms to destroy your crop (well that is what I thought). Since then I put hydroponics to much better use, not just farming. We solved pollution problems by cleaning mines effluent with hydroponics and aquaculture. They were used to remove toxic metals to produce clean water (which we sold and make more money of than the produce). What I learned from 1987 I tried to compile in this website and I hope it is from some value to the serious commercial farmer that wants to take the journey into Commercial Hydroponic Farming.

How to calculate nutrient content with atomic weight and molecular weight

2014-07-21T14:54:25+02:00By |Fertilizers, Nutrients|

The atomic weight or molecular weight is the relative weight of each atom compared to other atoms. The base element to which all other elements are measured is oxygen and it is given the value of 16.00. The atomic or molecular weights of the most important elements used in hydroponics [...]

Here is a quick way to identify macro-nutrient deficiency and toxicity symptoms

2016-09-24T08:29:10+02:00By |Macro nutrients, Nutrients|

NITROGEN Toxicity Symptoms Plants are dark green in colour with excessive amount of foliage Root growth is restricted Reduced flowering and seed production Plants wilt quickly under water stress situations Susceptible to diseases. Deficiency Symptoms Plants are light green in colour starting at the bottom leaves Restricted growth Leaves are [...]

Hydroponic fertilizers explained

2013-08-03T16:52:35+02:00By |Fertilizers, Nutrients|

Plants consist of 80-95 % of water, depending on specie, less than 15-20 % percent consists of carbon (C), oxygen (O) and hydrogen (H). The remaining 1.5 % is made up of the macro and microelements. This small portion will be our focus. All plants require macro- and microelements in specific ratios in order [...]

Water pH Explained

2014-02-15T14:09:04+02:00By |Nutrients, pH|

Water pH is a mathematical term to denote degrees of acidity or alkalinity and is expressed by a series of positive numbers between 0 and 14 with 7 being neutral. Zero being very acidic and 14 highly alkaline. Water pH can be measured by a hand held pH meter operated [...]

Salt content of water for hydroponic use

2014-04-04T16:19:28+02:00By |Nutrients, Salt content|

Salt content is one of the most important factors that should be evaluated before designing a hydroponic production system. It has been found that yields can decreased by 35% using low quality water, or water with high salt content. You will see that if there are elements in the water [...]

Greenhouse heating – 5 facts you should look at

2013-08-03T20:17:14+02:00By |Greenhouses, Heating, Systems|

Greenhouse heating can be very expensive, especially if you greenhouse is not optimally set up for heating.  There are factors that can be taken into account in order to reduce greenhouse heating cost or capital installation cost. (A lot more info is in The Polytunnel Book) Reduce air leakages It is estimated [...]

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