alt.hn

3/15/2026 at 4:23:43 AM

Rack-mount hydroponics

https://sa.lj.am/rack-mount-hydroponics/

by cdrnsf

3/15/2026 at 6:18:03 AM

You did mention the reason for a server rack as a matter of circumstance. But if I were to do and really want the Hydropnics part, I’d sell the Server Rack (good price) and buy the cheaper Pallet Racks. The first thing that comes to mind is that it will be easier to plan, pluck, change lights, etc.

Server Racks - you don’t interact with them often, but you will need to with the Hydroponics one.

Also, your setup is too clean. Water will drip, spill, the pebbles will fall. Looks really nice, though.

About 5 years ago, I worked with a Climate Research Scientist friend, growing exotic plants in dutch-buckets, tower aeroponics, and rack mounted red-lit setups to induce Vitamin B-12 (only found in meat, so deficiencies develops in vegetarian) to Spinach trying to produce Super Spinash.

by Brajeshwar

3/15/2026 at 8:53:33 AM

Having it closed (like this server rack) allows for controlled air circulation if fans are installed and flow paths are designed properly. Also, in case heating is needed, for example, if operated in the basement the heat loss can be reduced.

by astahlx

3/15/2026 at 4:55:17 PM

Tell me more about super spinach. B12 doesn't come from plants or animals, but from bacteria. So, I don't know how you could get B12 into spinach by using red lights. You'd also need to introduce the bacteria and somehow make it live inside of the spinach.

Do you have some sort of inoculation step and then use red light to penetrate the spinach leaves to feed light energy to the bacteria?

by mcdonje

3/16/2026 at 11:03:23 AM

Yes, we had an inoculation step — measured amount added to the water supply system. Red is the generic component to help plants grow.

by Brajeshwar

3/15/2026 at 7:27:56 AM

Op did mention that that it's impossible to get the rack out because they installed the doors after the rolled the rack cabinet in

by yigalirani

3/15/2026 at 7:29:25 AM

It's obviously not impossible, just need to take it apart.

by vasco

3/15/2026 at 7:41:29 AM

Or pry the door frame apart and tap it back in place after rolling the rack out.

Worth a mention as many door frames are easier to remove than a number of people might suspect .. fewer pieces to disassemble than many {object}'s and not an uncommon hack when moving furniture.

by defrost

3/15/2026 at 5:40:27 PM

Removing door frames is easy. Putting it back together without looking like crap is the hard part.

by onlypassingthru

3/15/2026 at 7:18:49 PM

Repeat after me: caulk and paint make it what it ain't

by malfist

3/16/2026 at 1:35:38 AM

It's "caulk and paint make me the carpenter I ain't"

by LoganDark

3/15/2026 at 10:19:47 AM

For the one I have that would be irreversible. You‘d have to cut it up.

by thunfischbrot

3/15/2026 at 10:04:43 PM

when i moved to this apartment, the wooden wardrobe i had in previous one (built on the spot) could eventually move through that door and corners but absolutely could not move through this doors/corridors/corners (or staircase). So.. i got a power-jigsaw and cut it into upper and lower halves. Those moved easily. Then "assembled" them halves with lots of metal planks and screws on the new spot. Tadaa...

Luckily it was wooden.

by svilen_dobrev

3/15/2026 at 11:35:51 AM

Yo. I successfully did outdoor aeroponics with insane temperatures in the root chamber (near 40°C/100°F). My secret? I grew 'Virginia Gold' tobacco.

> Farmers discovered that bright leaf tobacco needs thin, starved soil, and those who could not grow other crops found that they could grow tobacco. Formerly unproductive farms reached 20–35 times their previous worth. By 1855, six Piedmont counties adjoining Virginia led Virginia's tobacco market

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Types_of_tobacco

This is one beast of a plant. My plants stayed alive when I stopped spraying water in September and only died because of frost in late December. They were about 40 cm high due to the small volume of the root chamber.

Anyway it's a great choice for an outdoor aeroponics setup.

by Xmd5a

3/15/2026 at 6:20:04 PM

For some reason I had it in mind that growing tobacco was illegal in the UK, so your post prompted me to check and lo! Apparently it's entirely legal, for personal use.

So now I have a new project - I've always wanted to smoke 'pure' tobacco, like the ancients.

I'm twenty years too old to have an illegal harvest at home :)

Next stop, need to check how to cure the leaves.

Thanks!

by detritus

3/15/2026 at 4:12:15 PM

What did you do with the crop?

by travisr

3/15/2026 at 6:01:23 PM

Do you smoke it?

Sell it?

by DANmode

3/15/2026 at 3:44:10 PM

Except the tobacco part. Is this consumer grade or is it meant for industrial uses (organic pesticides etc).

by pm90

3/15/2026 at 7:47:06 AM

I've also tried a few different ways to grow plants indoors and I'd like to share my experiences for anyone interested. I like to grow indoors since I can do it year round and the environment is clean, stable and there are no animals or bugs (knock wood). Over time, I've gravitated towards low-maintenance hydroponics. Growing in soil needs soil, which is also dirty and so a bit more PITA, and it can harbor bugs.

One setup I had was a vertical (hydroponic) window farm, which looked pretty great, but the roots start to get into the tubing, which I suspect could happen in the rack-mount system too. It also wasn't simple to just take out one plant for maintenance.

A small NFT (nutrient film technique) box has worked very well, requires very little material as substrate and is easy to maintain. Might get problematic if growing the same plants for over a year since the roots can grow a lot and basically partially outgrow the system so the flow of water starts being insufficient and therefore might need at least some trimming and replanting if some of the roots start to suffer.

I'm in the process of trying out deep water culture, which requires even less materials since there's no growing medium, just water, and roots are submerged so doesn't have the same issues as NFT. Probably has it's own problems, though, and air pumps can be loud!

Anyhow, most of my plants are in a passive hydroponics system. "Kratky method" is something a bit similar. I basically replaced soil in pots with clay pellets and manage watering so that I have to water every 2-3 days. Requires clay pellets as the substrate so needs a bit more effort up front, but doesn't require electricity and is more portable when using small/medium sized pots. Pellets can be reused (at least most of them). I also added a short tube for monitoring water level and possible maintenance if I need to wash / flush the pot with the plant in it.

Regarding fertilizing, I rarely do any accurate measurements anymore. I got a few pump bottles and measured how much fertilizer one push gets me and wrote on the bottles how many pushes per litre. I also eye-ball the water color a bit since I know how it should look like.

Oh, and the plants that have done well for me, and can grow for a long time with multiple harvests (so no lettuce): peppers, cherry tomatoes, cucumbers, trying some small strawberries

by kalaksi

3/15/2026 at 5:45:02 PM

I've spent some time looking into all these methods before, but all of them required substantial amounts of plastic in contact with plants/water and in full sun/heat. Are you worried about leachables?

To be clear, I'm not asking this in some new age way, and I'm sure it's better than the amount of pesti/herbicides used traditionally (and the whole movement behind hydro/aquaponics is fascinating to me), just wondering if this is something you ever tried minimising with such setups?

by curl-up

3/15/2026 at 8:51:02 PM

I've thought about it, but I'm not too worried. I wash containers before use and there's not a lot of sun or heat indoors. My regular pots are actually ceramic or stone. They look and feel better than plastic, but I also want to avoid unnecessary plastic when I can.

by kalaksi

3/15/2026 at 7:46:32 PM

Indoors will help with that because glass blocks a lot of the UV. More panes/thickness and coatings also helps

by Scoundreller

3/15/2026 at 11:39:08 AM

try zucchinis next (protip: the flowers needs the fresh of the morning to bloom).

by Xmd5a

3/15/2026 at 5:56:15 AM

Is that a subtle 5th Element reference in the crontab?

This is fun!

The following isn’t a knock on anyone doing cool stuff like this: I’ve avoided any sort of tinkering and automation of my gardening because I find gardening to be a slower-moving, meditative escape from technology. My brain shifts into a different mode (almost a flow state?) when I’m out working in the soil and tending to my plants.

by jodacola

3/15/2026 at 6:24:09 AM

I know this was about the journey, but for anyone interested in home hydroponics (without the journey of building it), I have had a Gardyn[1] for 6-7 years. It works well. It has a 6 gallon (20 liter) tank and a couple of strong vertical growth lights, in a sleek package that looks good in the home. Plants are fitted into pods, in standard-size rockwool blocks that you can get from any grower shop.

The fact that it works at all after a number of years, is surprising to me, given everything that goes on with it: You've got a moist environment with water pumped through it multiple times a day, fertilizer in the water crusting up in places, living plants with their roots growing into the pipes, algae growth, and a lot of parts that are shuffled around often.

There might well be other systems around these days that are the same or better, I wouldn't know, the Gardyn is just what I ended up with when I researched it years ago and I'm happy with it. For downsides, seeds are expensive from Gardyn, but you can plant your own. I do buy some from Gardyn because they have a big selection, and they usually come out good, which regular seeds often don't for whatever reason. They try to push their subscription service but I don't need it, so don't use it.

Hope this doesn't come off as advertisement, as I said there may well be better options (would like to hear about them), but this one works for me for a pretty hassle-free experience.

[1] https://mygardyn.com/product/gardyn-home-kit/

by johnyzee

3/15/2026 at 9:02:09 AM

I don't know how much fresh food costs in the US, but I don't see how its possible to recoup the investment on this $900 setup in a lifetime!

Then you add the electricity cost and the seeds, and the maintenance time...

But it looks nice in a kitchen!

by wiether

3/15/2026 at 8:41:18 PM

If you fully measure the output (benefit) vs cost, the numbers don’t look so bad.

For example, it is known that nutrient value in produce drops at an astonishing rate over time; so having locally grown food that you can pick and eat immediately means you’ll get vastly more benefit, beyond just calories and fiber.

Also, when supply chains get disrupted and your grocery has empty shelves, you still have good, healthy food.

You’re also reducing transportation effects, which is to say you are having a less negative impact on the environment.

Most of what we put prices on are ignoring real costs.

by michaelteter

3/16/2026 at 5:44:06 PM

I have a secret theory that the inherent depletion of some as yet unidentified "total nutritional value" of the foods we eat, due to mass farming and fertilizer reliance, plays some part in the American and global obesity crisis.

It's probably more of an issue in the pre-obesity stage, but since man does not live by bread alone any more than man lives by calorie alone, and given that a person can die of malnutrition with a full stomach, for instance by eating only rabbit or fish, I imagine that at least part of what causes the insatiable hunger or lack of satisfaction from eating that leads to obesity must surely be that there are some nutrient profiles that are missing from most of the food we have available.

by BizarroLand

3/15/2026 at 12:29:00 PM

Fresh produce is pretty inexpensive here for the most part. But fresh herbs (like thyme, not a euphemism) are sold in small quantities (15g-20g) in plastic clamshell packaging in groceries for $2-$4 each.

You don’t need a $900 gadget to grow fresh herbs, either, of course. But that’s one way you could think of it “recouping” the capital.

by buescher

3/15/2026 at 7:49:35 PM

yeah, calories are cheap: grow for flavour/value.

In a backyard 5gal/19l bucket, I could get 3lbs/1.5kg of potatoes or 3lbs/1.5kg of cherry tomatoes. The latter is a better deal.

by Scoundreller

3/15/2026 at 5:26:14 PM

I wouldn’t grow food hydroponically to save money, but growing food can get you really nice sweet varieties with stronger flavor than you can get in stores (since you can pick them at your convenience).

That said, I prefer growing outdoors if you have the space. It’s a total different maintenance (with way more bugs) but it also doubles as decor better than my hydroponic setup ever could.

by harrall

3/15/2026 at 3:11:05 PM

What's the power consumption like?

Edit: just checked the specs, 47 kWh/mo, roughly 65W on average

by fer

3/15/2026 at 5:29:56 AM

Singapore is currently claiming title of "world's largest (and tallest) indoor vertical farm" with a five story, two hectare automated racked site (Jan 2026):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VJuo6Te1fM4 (2.5 minutes)

by defrost

3/15/2026 at 5:47:06 AM

I wonder if they are profitable, or if some sort of government support is involved. I don't think power for all those lights is particularly cheap in Singapore, and the competition in the surrounding countries has cheap labor and lots of free sun and rain.

by shellfishgene

3/15/2026 at 8:51:57 AM

If you look closely enough, everything is government supported. However farming is explicitly government subsidised everywhere.

by Swenrekcah

3/15/2026 at 8:35:34 PM

Bringing necessities (water, food, energy) local is worth subsidizing. For those who doubt, just look at current events. Two morons with the right levers can upend countless critical processes.

by michaelteter

3/15/2026 at 8:31:04 AM

That's a hard thing to have introspection in as just about every productive source of food probably has some government support.

Just about everywhere has understood "bread and circuses" and "let them eat cake" to the point of monetarily promoting food production.

One of the big distinctions between feudalism and extreme capitalism in my mind is forgetting this.

by monocasa

3/15/2026 at 5:38:58 AM

There have been vertical farms in Singapore that went bankrupt previously. I don’t think this model has worked very well in general globally, compared to traditional farms. This particular one is producing insanely expensive produce. For example the lettuce that is mentioned is over $14 a pound. It’s also a hydroponic farm which means only some crops can be grown.

by SilverElfin

3/15/2026 at 5:12:11 AM

Years ago, when California had a really severe drought, I saw a large version of this to grow grass for horses. It had a stack of trays with lights, and each day, you harvested one tray, fed your horse, and replanted the tray. It was only cost-effective when grass hay was really expensive.

by Animats

3/15/2026 at 4:54:29 PM

I’ve seen this popping up in a few areas. In harsher winter conditions there are some small time farmers using this method to supplement their feed during bad winters.

by Aboutplants

3/15/2026 at 5:33:59 AM

What's the idea behind not using capital letters?

by chronogram

3/15/2026 at 6:06:10 AM

Gen Z will often write like that, feeling that using capitalisation feels too "formal" for non-professional communication.

It's feel just the next evolution in our written messaging dialect. Gen X had c u l8r?. Millennials didn't have to pay per character, and got full qwerty keyboards so opted for normal sentences. And now Gen Z have decided that auto-capitalisation is unnecessary.

by zdc1

3/15/2026 at 9:33:18 AM

I can't speak for the OPs case, but it's worth keeping in mind that not all languages that people are coming from have capital letters as a concept.

I actually didn't notice the lack of caps until I read this comment

by benjojo12

3/15/2026 at 11:21:12 AM

I found it pretty hard to read without the caps. I guess the punctuation mark is too small for my elderly eyes, and my brain sees it like one gigantic sentence. Perhaps the author of the blog is a fan of Kafka?

by agadius

3/15/2026 at 6:07:35 PM

Ctrl + “+” in your browser :]

I also didn’t notice the lack of caps until coming to the comments.

…and I’m a pedantic SOB!

by DANmode

3/15/2026 at 5:42:58 AM

The author is trying very hard to look like they are not trying at all.

by cowthulhu

3/15/2026 at 6:06:31 PM

or learned English chatting on the Internet?

At least make it sound like you’re speculating if you’re going to.

by DANmode

3/15/2026 at 5:42:29 AM

Presumably a shibboleth for human-generated content

by mvkel

3/15/2026 at 5:45:00 AM

Gen Z illiteracy crisis.

by Gigachad

3/15/2026 at 7:24:38 AM

Let's not turn HN into a bunch of crotchety old men complaining about the youths.

by titanomachy

3/15/2026 at 7:47:12 AM

Any particular reason you didn't write a complete sentence but still used a period, kid?

by KPGv2

3/15/2026 at 7:44:23 AM

I'd take all lowercase over all uppercase anyday

by fixxation92

3/15/2026 at 4:40:39 PM

So:

    1. Convert acres of agricultural land into a datacenter.
    2. Put plants inside.
    3. ???
    4. Profit?

by amelius

3/15/2026 at 5:04:50 PM

Could be a good use for all the AI datacentres when the bubble bursts.

by astoor

3/15/2026 at 5:27:41 PM

Sounds good: RAM chips out, plants in.

by amelius

3/15/2026 at 5:09:08 PM

If you have cheap energy, this can be much more water-and-space-efficient than farming outside by eliminating pests and weeds and providing an ideal growing environment for the particular plant year-round.

by colechristensen

3/15/2026 at 6:21:48 AM

I also built something similar. In the end I appreciated the services our nature provides to us even more. Replicating all this artificially is really hard and energy intensive. Planting and growing plans outsides is fun and rewarding; adding all the tech in the end felt like a big waste of resources.

My motivation to work on such a project was my disbelief in human mankind to keep our planet earth habitable.

by astahlx

3/15/2026 at 8:31:57 PM

I played around with hydroponics. in the end, they never ended up better than dirt. with dirt you have to water it, and fertilize every few months, but that's it.

with hydroponics, every week I was refilling the water, and adjusting the EC and pH. The end result was very similar to what dirt got me

by roshin

3/15/2026 at 2:29:55 PM

FWIW I've found ebb and flow systems work fine without the aerator in the water, as the roots get plenty of water during the ebb cycle.

by jszymborski

3/15/2026 at 6:05:03 PM

You mean oxygen?

by DANmode

3/16/2026 at 2:22:38 AM

Haha yes, sorry

by jszymborski

3/15/2026 at 6:29:24 AM

Setting aside the DIY and hacking spirit of the project, let's remember that, with the commonly accepted figure of 2,500 kcal/day for an adult male, a whole iceberg lettuce (~600g) provides about ~87 kcal which is roughly 3.5% of what one's need.

by tzury

3/15/2026 at 9:41:26 AM

So what though? I can get all the calories I need from $0.50 of rice but I still need crunchy things and protein.

by TurdF3rguson

3/15/2026 at 4:11:53 PM

Getting all the calories you need from (plain white) rice just about meet minimum protein needs for a sedentary lifestyle (around 50g protein). For every 100 calories of rice there are about 2.1g of protein, so for a 2000 calorie diet of just rice that would be 42g protein. But eating 10 cups of rice is a lot.

Protein-wise, an all cabbage diet would give you more if you’re meeting calorie needs - 5.1g protein per 100 calories, or 102g protein for 2000 calories worth of cabbage.. but that is a heck of a lot of cabbage (17ish lbs)!

Let’s be real though, people should be eating a varied diet and not just a single food. And perhaps not a junk food only diet.

by rmast

3/15/2026 at 4:15:47 PM

Any issues about amino acid deficiencies from that? (as opposed to protein more generally?)

When I was growing up, there was a vogue among my fellow vegetarians for the book Diet for a Small Planet which suggested that we needed to eat a diversity of amino acids in each meal, hence "complementary" proteins at the same time. This concept then seemed to fade away completely because it appears that the body can actually successfully make use of amino acids even when consumed at different times. But they have to be consumed eventually!

by schoen

3/16/2026 at 5:06:17 AM

This was the selling point for a Mexican cuisine staple: that rice & beans had all the complementary proteins. But, good to hear that the body does not need to have the complements in the exact same meal.

by euroderf

3/15/2026 at 10:20:33 PM

It's not a complete protein, you need another source of protein or your body won't be able to repair tissue.

by TurdF3rguson

3/15/2026 at 9:48:06 AM

Looks great! It could be nice to have an integrated temperature control solution that keeps your servers cool and your plants warm.

by seu

3/15/2026 at 8:31:14 PM

This is the best thing so far on the internet I have read this year. Thanks.

by koshinae

3/15/2026 at 5:09:19 PM

I just love the simplicity of a cron job control system. This is so fun.

by chermi

3/15/2026 at 6:04:58 PM

cron and ssh is the worst way to control the pump motor. If the network is interrupted the pump will be stuck on until the next cycle.

by gzread

3/15/2026 at 11:02:47 AM

From someone who grew a lot of weed in closets, nice work!

by Gud

3/15/2026 at 5:18:46 AM

I found growing my own produce to be a great way to appreciate farmers and my local supermarket.

by esafak

3/15/2026 at 1:30:26 PM

Any of the billion guides to growing hydroponic cannabis can teach you how to do this in a vertical rack without issues. Neat write up though.

by givinguflac

3/15/2026 at 9:46:06 AM

I am here for exactly this kind of surprise. Nice work, HN!

by jeffrallen

3/15/2026 at 6:42:00 AM

Always lettuce. If someone can figure out how to grow something with a dense and full nutrient profile then there might be something to vertical farms.

by colordrops

3/15/2026 at 7:57:36 AM

The challenge is finding something that is energy dense, that grows quickly, and has a high value to justify the length of trouble you have to go through. Things like potatoes, grains, rice, etc. Are relatively low value and they don't grow that quick.

Potatoes especially don't like to be submerged. But otherwise they are not that hard to grow. A simple grow bag will do. That's true for a lot of root vegetables and tubers. For vegetables like that, greenhouses are more common.

With rice and grains, they grow well enough in hydroponics but you just need an enormous amount of area to get to interesting amounts. Also the growing season for that is quite long. Hydroponics favor things that you can harvest in weeks rather than say 2-3 times per year.

by jillesvangurp

3/15/2026 at 7:18:50 AM

I grow kale, mustard greens, herbs, and sprouts. I'm not looking to erase my need for produce. I just want to always have some fresh staples. Easier to pull off a few sprigs of parsley or some basil than it is to buy those little packs all the time.

by odie5533

3/15/2026 at 9:29:30 AM

I remember seeing people suggest vertical algae farms that could (in the marketing theory) be a very high nutrient source. The problem then is that you're eating algae. Spirulina is an acquired taste.

I'm more intrigued by duckweed, which grows very fast and is a common food in some countries.

by regularfry

3/15/2026 at 11:28:44 AM

Isn't the idea that you get to do that with all the fertile land you liberate from the lettuce?

by boomskats

3/15/2026 at 9:19:44 AM

there's no free lunch - the plants are just rearranging what you give them.

by roughly

3/15/2026 at 12:36:23 PM

I agree. Potatoes transform light into starch. With traditional farming you get a huge "free" solar collector. In vertical farming you have to pay for the light.

So the alternative is to grow lettuce that has a greater price to energy ratio.

by gus_massa

3/15/2026 at 5:31:53 PM

More than just light - the chemical profile of the soil is the feedstock for all of the interesting chemistry the plant does. The air can provide oxygen, nitrogen, hydrogen, and carbon, which are the backbone of a lot of the chemistry, but anything more exotic than that is coming from the soil. They're factories, not alchemists.

by roughly

3/15/2026 at 7:59:56 PM

Hydrogen comes from water. They have surplus of Oxygen from CO2 and water, so much that they give it away. Carbon comes from the CO2 in the air.

Other nutrients like phosphorus or potassium come disolved in water, but in intensive farming they must be added to the soil, so it's the same that dissolving in the hydroponic solution. Perhaps it's more efficient in hydroponic than in soil.

Nitrogen is more tricky. There is plenty of Nitrogen in the air but not in a useful form, so in most cases it must be added as fertilizer. In some cases like soy the plants have helper bacteria that transform the nitrogen from the air into useful forms. This conversion takes a lot of energy, so I don't expect the lack of wind to be a problem, you still need some air movement to keep the CO2 high and the O2 low. (Anyway, farming soy under artificial light is probably not profitable for the same reason farming potatoes under artificial light is not profitable.)

The most important thing you lack inside a vertical farm that you get almost for free in a big faring field is sunlight (i.e. energy).

by gus_massa

3/15/2026 at 1:22:13 PM

co2 is mostly free and plentiful, and also the main ingredient for plant biomass.

by zokier

3/15/2026 at 5:32:56 PM

which is why lettuce grows just fine.

by roughly

3/15/2026 at 2:47:07 PM

Fruiting plants require more space. You're not going to grow tomatoes or peppers in a server rack. Density works well for leafy greens and microgreens.

by driverdan

3/15/2026 at 6:09:33 PM

Turns out you’re meant to eat multiple plants.

Bioflavonoids are important.

by DANmode

3/15/2026 at 5:10:36 PM

Mushrooms!

by chermi

3/15/2026 at 8:23:19 AM

I wonder if flood and drain would work with orchids.

I do that manually with my plants twice a week, they have flowers almost all year, but it's a chore to bring them out, flood them, make them drain and bring them back home.

Also my wife always yells at me because I always wet the floor in the process.

by gdorsi

3/15/2026 at 2:32:18 PM

There's a couple of YouTube channels (mainly from India) that claim great success with orchids and safron though I'm skeptical of the claims.

by jszymborski

3/15/2026 at 11:39:19 PM

Really depends on the draining proprieties of your soil,

and how “flood” your flood is,

right?

by DANmode

3/15/2026 at 12:45:15 PM

[dead]

by planerde

3/15/2026 at 11:44:12 AM

[dead]

by longtermemory

3/15/2026 at 10:52:14 AM

[dead]

by raziefx

3/15/2026 at 6:11:43 AM

All lower case, instant won't read.

by RagnarD

3/15/2026 at 12:49:28 PM

I didnt even notice.

by jaffa2

3/15/2026 at 12:38:48 PM

Agree. It is just stupid, doesn't serve any functional purpose.

by diego_moita

3/15/2026 at 5:56:10 PM

In this case, it seems to be serving as a useful filter function.

by roughly

3/15/2026 at 6:10:08 PM

Yeah, I got the sarcasm, but that's ok.

I'll water my indoor tomatoes, basil and thyme. It is way more productive than blabbering about gardening in the internet.

by diego_moita