Join today and have your say! It’s FREE!

Become a member today, It's free!

We will not release or resell your information to third parties without your permission.
Please Try Again
{{ error }}
By providing my email, I consent to receiving investment related electronic messages from Stockhouse.

or

Sign In

Please Try Again
{{ error }}
Password Hint : {{passwordHint}}
Forgot Password?

or

Please Try Again {{ error }}

Send my password

SUCCESS
An email was sent with password retrieval instructions. Please go to the link in the email message to retrieve your password.

Become a member today, It's free!

We will not release or resell your information to third parties without your permission.

Sucro Ltd V.SUGR.WT


Primary Symbol: V.SUGR Alternate Symbol(s):  SUGRF

Sucro Limited is an integrated sugar company focused on serving the North American market. It offers SweetLife by Sucro Organic Cane Sugar, which is a new granulated organic cane sugar. With SweetLife by Sucro, it offers expanded industry solutions across multiple platforms, including facilities for processing and warehousing. SweetLife by Sucro also offers end-product conventional cane, organic sugar and other specialty sweetener products. It provides a variety of refining and sales of conventional and organic sugars, including Granulated Sugar and Liquid Sucrose. Its integrated supply chain includes refined sugar from its own refineries in the United States and Canada, along with sourcing raw and refined sugar from countries throughout Latin America and delivering to customers in North America and the Caribbean. It has established a production, sales and sourcing network throughout North America with two cane sugar refineries and an additional value-added processing facility.


TSXV:SUGR - Post by User

Comment by BorrowedClotheson May 06, 2019 1:46pm
194 Views
Post# 29715652

RE:Good Read . Newbies Enjoy

RE:Good Read . Newbies Enjoy Nice read, thanks goldy. Makes sense now how they'd harvest clones faster than usual.
Goldy63 wrote:

How Aeroponics Works

In aeroponics, plant roots aren’t anchored to a growing medium like dirt, rockwool, coir, vermiculite or perlite. Instead, they’re secured to a support platform by a flexible collar, often made of neoprene foam rubber, affixed to the plant’s stem.

 

The crown—the leafy, sun-loving top of the plant—is positioned above the platform, while the root system hangs below in an enclosed or semi-enclosed chamber.

The root chamber is airy, with plenty of room for the roots. It is also outfitted with a network of spray nozzles that mist the roots with liquid nutrients and water on a regular schedule.

Nutrients not absorbed by the roots are returned to a reservoir and recycled.

It’s a simple idea: eliminate the middleman—the media—and supply a plant’s nutritional needs directly to its roots using tiny water droplets that can be absorbed easily.

The platform used to support the plants can be large, small, horizontal, angled or vertical. It doesn’t matter as long as the roots are protected and have consistent access to the nutrient mixture.

It’s a pretty ingenious system that’s scalable as well as flexible enough to accommodate different types of growing situations.

If you were a plant, you’d probably love growing in an aeroponic system. You wouldn’t have to struggle through layers of soil or inert anchoring media to find nutrients or water.

Both would be delivered right to your roots, where they could be absorbed efficiently through osmosis. Oxygen, and plenty of it, would be available to help maximize your growing efforts by increasing the conversion of sugars to energy, and there would be few if any pests to deal with. To a basil plant or lowly spud, that would be living the good life.

Aeroponics allows plants to devote more energy to doing what they do best—growing. That translates to faster starts and better yields.

By some estimates, growing aeroponically can increase plant growth three fold over growing the same plants in soil. Plants grown aeroponically also thrive on less fertilizer.

What fertilizer isn’t used initially is recirculated, becoming 100% available to plant roots at future feedings, so very little is wasted.

Plants grown in air need less space because they aren’t competing for nutrients. A smaller overall growing footprint allows for a more efficient use space and essentials like light.

Aeroponics is such an efficient growing method that NASA has been one of its biggest supporters since the 1990s.

The first space vegetables were part of an aeroponics experiment conducted in orbit in 1995 using potatoes.

If astronauts can grow aeroponic crops in space, imagine how easy it is to garden aeroponically in your greenhouse, growroom, basement or garage.

The Advantages of Growing Aeroponically

Faster and more reliable growth: Plants produced aeroponically grow fast and relatively uniformly.

This can mean getting a jump start on spring planting, adding an additional lettuce crop during a season or being able to clone new plants from established stock quickly and with fewer losses.

Higher yields: Because plants have a smorgasbord of nutrients available to them almost continuously, they typically set and develop fruit quickly and produce more abundant yields.

Better flavor: Some growers and aeroponics enthusiasts report that aeroponically grown food crops have richer flavor profiles than plants grown almost any other way.

More flexibility: If you want to change the nutrient solution you’re using, it’s relatively easy to make a switch in an aeroponic system.

There’s less flushing and cleaning involved. Because plant roots aren’t installed in a growing medium, they are generally easier to inspect, manage and remove, if necessary.

It’s even possible to change from one type of system to another in process. Aeroponic systems are also easier to relocate than other types of indoor gardens. They’re lightweight, which makes them user friendly.

Space savings: By some accounts, growing a crop aeroponically uses as little as one-tenth of the space of growing that same crop in soil.

Practically speaking, there are definite space savings, but how much space will depend on a few factors.

You can produce plenty of clones and seedlings aeroponically, but growing a tomato plant to maturity will still take some room. It is easy to grow plants vertically using aeroponics, though, which can be a big space saver depending on your crop wish list and layout.

A-frame units are popular, especially for crops like herbs and salad greens.

Water savings: Some crops require a lot of water, and the prospect of saving nearly half on water consumption (40% or thereabouts) using aeroponics can be pretty compelling.

Cost savings: Because aeroponic systems use less water, less fertilizer and less space than other plant growing options, they incur lower operating costs over time.

The Disadvantages of Growing Aeroponically

Higher initial costs: In theory, aeroponics is elegantly simple, but growing plants with air, water and nutrients can be equipment intensive.

Why? Because timed nutrient availability is an essential part of the process, and that requires automation tools and the ability to produce a fine mist under adequate pressure.

Aeroponic assemblies use pumps, prefilters, manifolds, fine spray nozzles and timers, not to mention the lights, fans and other accessories associated with indoor growing.

Unless you’re an avid do-it-yourselfer and can build your own system, start-up costs are high compared to other indoor growing options.

If you do take the DIY route, be sure to steer clear of PVC materials, which can leach dangerous chemicals, and stick with food-grade pumps, nozzles, tubing and fittings.

Malfunctions can be deadly: Because plants depend on regularly supplied nutrients and moisture, anything that upsets that delicate balance can spell disaster, including power outages, blocked sprinkler heads, wonky timers, kinked hoses and clogged filters.

Not all aeroponic systems are created equal: There are lots of different ways to construct an aeroponic system, but the most critical task is to ensure regular, fine-mist nutrient delivery. This can be harder than it sounds.

From design problems like voids that don’t get enough, or any, spray, to low-pressure systems that fail to deliver nutrients efficiently as plant roots become more dense and crowded, this is one area where close monitoring is important.

The old adage, “You get what you pay for,” is probably true here as well.

There’s a learning curve: From deciding on the best plant cultivars to choosing the right nutrient brand, timing schedule and mist droplet size, a successful aeroponic set-up requires experimentation.

If you haven’t done it before, it’s a whole new approach to gardening. The error part can be frustrating, especially in the beginning. Thorough research and planning will help you avoid some potential problems and recognize others early, before they become critical.

The technology is still developing: Aeroponic technology, although robust, may not be as focused on the casual indoor grower as one might expect looking at all the advancements in hydroponics over, say, the last 10 years.

Demand hasn’t caused the downward price adjustments and entry-level bargains one sometimes sees with hydroponics, either. There’s a great deal of interest on both the developmental and the retail side of the equation, though, which means more and better (and possibly more budget friendly) ways to garden aeroponically in the future, so stay tuned.

The Future of Aeroponics

Using air to produce a great indoor garden isn’t the only thing on offer with aeroponics. Some experts believe it’s the wave of the future for locavores and urban farmers, especially in areas where land is precious and there are plenty of mouths to feed.

If you’ve seen those futuristic photos of green landscapes growing up the sides of skyscrapers, you’ve got the idea.

It’s also interesting to note that aeroponics is important to the space program, where NASA is hard at work planning ways to grow crops efficiently during manned space travel or wherever humans might land in the future, including the moon and Mars.

Until we start adding a planet prefix to our zip codes, though, aeroponics can be a powerfully effective tool for the indoor gardener right here on Earth.



<< Previous
Bullboard Posts
Next >>