Old Man Eliminates Worldwide Need For Soil with Tiny Device

This Video is from the Youtube channel: “Keep on Growin’ with Mike VanDuzee”. 

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  • @charleswaters455 says:

    I’m thinking crushed marl, basically crushed shell and common in Florida, would work well. It shouldn’t wick but will provide structure for the roots to cling to. I’ll try it.

  • @sjay4673 says:

    Thanks for everything you’ve shared over the years, Mike! Keep up the great content!…and keep on growin’! 👍

  • @ronm6585 says:

    Thanks Mike.

  • @TroyTime02 says:

    Just Keeps Getting Better!!! Great stuff as Usual! 🙂

  • @ScullyPop says:

    You’re a genius!

  • @cherylwmh6543 says:

    Excellent summary and experiments!

  • @s.b.1681 says:

    Hi, where do you buy the refillerable adapters?

    Also the round pebble and which kinds sand, where do you buy them?

    • @KeepOnGrowin says:

      Link is in the description for the adapters. Look for clay pebbles on Amazon and just play sand from the home improvement store.

  • @JasonChristopher44 says:

    Brother that’s super cool glad I stumbled on to this channel

  • @CharlesGann1 says:

    Appreciate all your experiments. Glad to see the sand working.

  • @scottbarker3409 says:

    The shelf of greens at the beginning looks really good, really informative thanks 👌

  • @diva555sg says:

    Experiment with more growing media other than clay pebble, sand, kitchen towel, microfibre cloth, woven/unwoven wipe, recycleable material that can clean with hydrogen peroxide, make your own paper to paper pot, bowl, invention, water bead, tiny pebble, mulch, etc.

  • @bowtielife says:

    Well, it seems the sand is totally successful! Those plastic containers are awesome. I love the cleaning method, too. Did you like the sand enough that you are changing your method for good, or will you still use the clay pebbles?

  • @michelleortiz-monasterio5272 says:

    The red pie pan looks prettier than plastic. Got me thinking… SILICONE CAKE PAN OR LOAF PAN … it’s food grade, non-toxic and we should be able to drill the deain holes in the side like you did with the plastic.

  • @Zbee167 says:

    LOVED THIS! Thanks for sharing.

  • @wilmawoods-o5h says:

    So wonderful. Cleared all my window ledges getting ready to start! Thank you. You are Awesome! ❤

  • @Katalyst_Amber says:

    I wonder if you can use baking soda to clean the sand with, instead of bleach? I only thought of this when washing organic produce, baking soda and water are used as a cheaper natural way to clean, to get any residue / debris off. I love this info… thank you so much!

  • @MrGaborseres says:

    👍 Cool 😎

  • @stepper8584 says:

    Hi Mike first of all thank you for your wonderful videos! I have a question and I hope you can take away my worries;
    I bought a giant bag of clay pebbles and started growing microgreens this way, but I saw they contain a LOT of aluminium.
    Is there a way it ends up in my plants or not? I don’t know if for example it’s in a form plants simply cannot absorb?? (same counts for the other minerals inside it)
    I do grow some bio-mediators (in Dutch it’s called this way it means plants that absorp all minerals also ones they don’t need like aluminium or lead).
    Hope this comment finds you, thank you a thousand times in advanced and God bless you!

  • @MrDonkov says:

    Interesting idea with the sand. One thing of caution, the sand needs to be non contaminated. Sand can contain heavy metals like lead or arsenic (particularly in construction sand), industrial chemicals from manufacturing processes, etc … Only use play sand or sandbox sand that’s specifically cleaned and screened for contaminants. Look for packages labeled as “washed,” “screened,” or “play sand.”

  • @billbucktube says:

    Like it‼️

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