How do you keep your room humid?

HumbleNMotivated

Well-Known Member
What's your method for keeping your room and ladies moist in this dry state? Such as type of humidifier type ( evaporative, etc ), capacity, brand, etc that work for you here in CO. Don't wanna fill it up multiple times a day, everyday is fine.

When my light comes on my rh sitting about 18% lights off 26%. Just don't have any experience with humidifiers for this purpose so figured you all might have some good input for me.

Thanks
 

chewberto

Well-Known Member
Humidifier is what you need to use, preferably one that shuts off at your desired relative humidity!
 

HumbleNMotivated

Well-Known Member
Thank you both. I won't have the ability to just up the plant count immediately in the flower room sadly lol. But always a good idea utilize every square inch of that flower room.

Any experience between the mist humidifiers and the evaporative ones? I feel like the evaporative would be more ideal instead of having a mist. Plants directly around the mist could have some contamination risks I feel.

What capacity do ya'll have and how often do you find yourself filling up that bad boy? I feel like if I get anything under 5gallons then I'll be doing it a few times a day...
 

SnapsProvolone

Well-Known Member
Drop a piezoelectric fogger transducer in a bucket of water with a float valve to keep it at proper level from tap. Run fogger as required by using a line voltage humidistat.
 

HumbleNMotivated

Well-Known Member
That's an interesting idea. I'll check out the cost vs reliability with those vs humidifiers. I don't have any of those parts on hand so either way would have to purchase either. I'll check it out. Thanks for the input!
 

makisupa

Active Member
I just use lots of biomass (plants)



truth.

using smart pots (on wire racks or shelves) also helps since they'll breathe more. stagger your watering so that youre watering different plants every other day or so. mine stays between 30-50% without any supplemental humidification. when i want to drop it, such as late in flower, i just run the exhaust more frequently.
 

HumbleNMotivated

Well-Known Member
All these humidifiers all seem high maintenance with bacteria worries and increased costs with filter replacements. I really enjoy the idea of the fogger system with line voltage humidistat. One worry is that the water particle size if it is visible as fog. Don't wanna have to worry about condensation on my hood, bulb, fans, or plants for that matter.

I'll remember more plants next time...
 

BadAndy

Well-Known Member
Why in the world would you think you need to add humidity?
from the daily smoker:

The humidity of your cannabis grow room plays a large part in how your plants function. It can effect the growth and final yield as well as having implications in the spread of disease and mildew. Through an understanding of exactly what your plant needs and how to make sure it has it, you will increase the quality of your grow and subsequently the marijuana you end up with. Knowledge is power!

Firstly, what is humidity? Well, humidity refers to the amount of water vapor present in the air (water vapor is simply water in its gas form). It is often referred to as a percentage, for example, a humidity of 75% means that the air currently contains 75% of the total maximum water vapor it can hold at that temperature. Also, as air increases in temperature it becomes capable of holding more water vapor, meaning temperature and humidity is related. As a result the percentage used to measure humidity is referred to as Relative Humidity (RH).

A lot of novice cultivators try to maintain a low humidity; this is a common mistake and is largely down to the idea that high humidity encourages disease amongst plants. Whilst partly true, this “play it safe” attitude can have its own adverse effects on how your cannabis plants grow.

The reason it is so important to your plants is because it will affect the rate at which they transpire. During transpiration plants release water vapor into the air, it functions along the same lines as osmosis – that the water levels inside and outside the plant will try to level out to equilibrium. This means that if you have a low humidity, your plants will rapidly transpire as water is drawn out into the air, reducing the amount of water within the plant and potentially having detrimental effects when water levels reach to low. If humidity is high then plants will transpire at a much slower rate and have a lesser potential for loss. It should be noted that cannabis plants have a “humidity” rating of pretty much 100%, so they will always transpire (which is OK as it is an essential part of its functioning).

So why do plants transpire? Well basically, they do it for a number of very important reasons. It is done for temperature control, it is how plants cool themselves and regulate their own temperature. It is also how the cannabis plants move minerals and nutrients about, as water leaves the plant it draws more up from the roots, allowing for the absorption of nutrients from the soil. Finally it is how your cannabis plants get the carbon dioxide they need out of the air – Plants open their stomata to let water vapor out, and in the process carbon dioxide gets in.

If the humidity is too low, then your cannabis plants are going to do a lot of transpiring and it will play havoc with their transportation systems. They will lose a lot of water and begin to exhibit the damage usually caused by dryness – stunted new leaves, shriveling old leaves and dying flowers.
As mentioned, whilst low humidity is usually the pitfall of most novice growers, it is for good reason – they have heard or read somewhere that high humidity is likely to cause the spread of disease, and they are not far off. High humidity has its own perils. In a grow room with excessive humidity and very little air movement (ventilation) you run the risk of exposing your plants to fungal disease, mildew and root rot. However, it is very easy to avoid, with careful grow room planning and management you should not find yourself in a situation where this happens.

The best way to monitor the RH of your grow room is to use a hygrometer, this should give you an accurate read out of the exact water vapor content of the air.

Humidity effect cannabis plants throughout their entire life cycle, below explains how it affects them at each stage and what the optimal humidity is.
 

remyaz0

Well-Known Member
I use a swamp cooler thru-out veg.. Colorado weather pretty much demands you add humidity thru veg cycle.. Ive done without but growth is considerably slowed; it will ad a few weeks to get same amount of growth... Once my grow area is full of vegetation i can safely remove the swamp cooler for flowering.. and humidity maintains it self..
 
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