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Anyone on-call for advice please

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  • Thanks all for your responses. Keep 'em coming please.
    I ended up modifying it a bit.
    Brought the plants out as per @fidgetbones advice.
    I have shielded the plants from sun with heavy bins.
    Plants around the bucket, a small tear in the bucket as overflow, water drop coming in every few seconds.
    The wicks are just touching the level off of water.
    This would help maintain the level. In case of high sun🌞 or heavy rain⛅💧🌊 I hope.

  • FireFire Posts: 19,096
    Can I ask if all the soil in the pot becomes wet, not just the area around the wick? I find different soils spread water in very different ways. Maybe the pots are small enough and the soil is right, to wet the whole pot. I have seen versions online that use actual, thick candle/oil wicks (along with others that use cut up tee shorts, wide shoe laces and the like). It would be interesting to see how different materials wick differently.

    But it seems like your system is working well for you. Out of interest, why do not submerge you cloth strips in the bucket and only have them near the surface?
  • KT53KT53 Posts: 9,016
    I think you are thinking of a syphon, KT53. A wick works slightly differently. Same as a pot standing in water tray, the soil acts like a wick and the water gets sucked up.
    I'm thinking more that the wick is more likely to dry out in the heat if the water is working against gravity.
  • kanwaljit.dhandekanwaljit.dhande Posts: 16
    edited July 2018
    @KT53 my previous contraption ( initial photos) was working overtime and filling up an empty pot with little trickle.
    I think the capillary action continues as the plants are at lower level than level of water, behaving as a siphon.
    Hence, @Fire, all the pot was getting wet/ drenched, so reduced the length of wick in water to just touching the level and created an overflow hole in the bucket.
  • fidgetbonesfidgetbones Posts: 17,618
    I would have the wick to the bottom of the bucket. The level only has to drop an inch and it will not work.
  • kanwaljit.dhandekanwaljit.dhande Posts: 16
    edited July 2018
    Thanx for the thought.
    I've just tested the scenario of level dropping by taking a dry wick and putting in bowl of food coloured water. The second the wick touched water, capillary action started. 
    And for the level dropping, the garden sprayer is dropping a drop of water every few seconds.
    Fingers crossed. 
  • FireFire Posts: 19,096
    A siphoning wick? That is a clever thought.
  • Fire said:
    A siphoning wick? That is a clever thought.
    Was that a comment or compliment!😊
  • FireFire Posts: 19,096
    Both!
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