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Notes for BCSS Southampton branch

Notes on sensors etc.

for the meeting on Tuesday 5th May 2026

Plan

Items to include

  • Sensors for temperature, humidity, light, CO2, soil moisture …
    • Battery operated / USB-C power / mains power
    • Communication by wire (incl. I2C, QWIIK), Wi-Fi, Zigbee, ZWave
  • Hub(s) to receive data
    • Data storage and display
  • Control incl. mains sockets
  • Demo (with IKEA mini greenhouse)
    • Laptop (and Raspberry Pi) both with Home Assistant
      • with Zigbee dongle(s) connecting to
        • temperature and light sensors
        • soil moisture sensor in a pot of compost
    • Display temperature changes
    • React to high or low value
    • Control a fan and lights
    • Large (Samsung) and 17“ monitors for display
    • Internet using phone as Wi-Fi hotspot
      • to allow access to weather data
      • to present display on (this) website for view on mobiles at meeting

Notes on heating, lighting, etc.

for the meeting on Tuesday 7th May 2024

Heating

Carl Garnham's article is aimed mainly at seed raising, i.e. heating small spaces rather than an entire greenhouse:

  • hysteresis
  • “many thermostats on the market leave a very great deal to be desired”
  • “Many seeds need a diurnal variation in temperature to germinate.”
  • Heating pads and soil warming cables

Full article, including links to references and equipment: Thoughts on heating by Carl Garnham, SABG Newsletter no. 49 (August 2023)

Lighting

Growers of South African bulbs probably get more worried about light levels than succulent growers, because the former plants tend to grow in winter.

1. Always keep greenhouse glass, inside and out, as scrupulously clean as is possible.

2. If any particular plant/species is associated with shade in habitat, think carefully about possible lighting levels habitat v. inside a UK greenhouse.

3. Within a UK greenhouse, in winter, with clean glass and bubble insulation in place, light levels and insolation will be a small fraction (10-20%?) of the level in winter, in habitat, in RSA.

4. Remove bubble-wrap insulation when not required, although it may be needed during the winter, the time of least natural daylight (insolation) in the UK.

5. Providing truly significant supplementary levels of growth-promoting lighting (PAR) beyond sunlight in a UK greenhouse is neither simple, nor cheap, more so if using anything but commercial horticultural designs and very much so in winter.

6. Stimulation of flowering/extending photoperiod does not require major levels of lighting.

7. Experiment, with winter photoperiod, lamps, reflectors and positioning of lamps, and perhaps colour of lighting – there is no data out there for any plant that we choose to grow, so far as I have been able to find. (Just a prompt – is the glaucous colour of some plants seen in nature, which is seldom seen in many plants in European cultivation, triggered by total insolation, or by high levels of just one colour? It would be comparatively easy to massively boost a narrow band of colour if that was all that the LED produced (assuming that LEDs are available that produce that colour), which is what commercial horticultural lighting does.)

8. If anyone experiments, to come closest to understanding what is going on, a measurement device is needed; you cannot trust your eyes (a consequence of the amazing biological engineering that eyes represent)

Full article, including links to references and equipment: My first tinkering with artificial lighting for plant growth by Carl Garnham, SABG Newsletter no. 50 (March 2024)

Composts etc.

In an earlier SABG Newsletter, there is an article on cat litter as a potting medium.

FIXME Add a link to the article.

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