Take a Trip Inside a Modern Hydroponics Facility
Indoor cannabis cultivation has moved out of the dimly-lit basements and garages operated by renegade activists, patients, and green thumbs. Nowadays, massive legal grows occupy sprawling warehouses and multi-million dollar agricultural facilities. As budgets and plant counts scale up, so do the technology and sophistication of these gardens.
To share a view of what the modern hydroponics facility looks like, Leafly visited Caliva, a premier cannabis dispensary and cultivation center in San Jose, California.
[Julia Sumpter/Leafly]
Soft, dim lighting in the hallways helps keep balance between the high-intensity lighting in the veg and flower rooms. Shallow foot baths outside each room ensure that no microbes or other contaminants pass into the clean ecosystem maintained inside.
[Julia Sumpter/Leafly]
The irrigation and fertigation systems deliver water and nutrient-rich solutions to the plants. They are the heart of any hydroponics system.
[Julia Sumpter/Leafly]
These systems are sanitized continually to ease pH balancing, avoid nutrient buildup in the lines, and ensure accurate ratios within the nutrient mix. The continual cleaning ensures no buildup of pathogens in Caliva’s systems.
[Julia Sumpter/Leafly]
Irrigation and fertigation are optimized for each strain in the garden and are adjusted during the various stages of the plant’s lifecycle to promote exceptional growth and vigor.
[Julia Sumpter/Leafly]
Cal-Mag Plus, for example, is a plant supplement that is rich in calcium, magnesium, and iron. A precise balance of these nutrients as an ingredient in a larger feeding regime helps encourage cannabis to increase its uptake of other essential minerals. Caliva uses base nutrients where possible to provide complete fertigation.
The waterlines carry the exact amount of the optimized mix of plant food to the respective room at just the right time.
[Julia Sumpter/Leafly]
Pressurized lines deliver food to the plants across the facility. Here you see the nutrients being fed to adolescent plants in the vegetative state. Caliva’s hydroponic systems provide the feeding solution by “flooding” the tables and slowly recycling it back through the system.
[Julia Sumpter/Leafly]
During the vegetative stage the plants are rooted in rockwool cubes, an inert growing medium that is made from fibers of chalk and spun rock. These cubes help the plants absorb and hold food in their root system as they grow.
[Julia Sumpter/Leafly]
In the flowering room, where the plants mature and bloom, the nutrient solutions are fed directly to each individual plant through feed lines.
During flowering, the plant’s needs change from nutrients that promote growth to those that encourage bulk and emphasize the natural flavors. Managing these needs helps each bud express its complex aroma and maximize its potency through increased resin production.
[Julia Sumpter/Leafly]
Caliva transplants rockwool cubes into an inert mix of coco coir and perlite during flowering. This gives the roots more room to spread out and offers increased oxygen and drainage than that of standard soil mixes.
[Julia Sumpter/Leafly]
Industrial HVAC systems help manage and maintain control over the air circulation and temperature in all of the flowering rooms.
[Julia Sumpter/Leafly]
Cool, fresh air circulates through inflated air tubes to hard-to-reach areas beneath the canopy.
Plants grow strong, lush, and tall, stretching up towards the grow lights and thriving in this pristine environment.
[Julia Sumpter/Leafly]
The thick, resinous bracts and calyxes on Juicy Jay look ready to burst as the strain undergoes its final flush in preparation for harvest.
[Julia Sumpter/Leafly]
In the nursery, fresh clippings known as clones are taken from mother plants. Using a rooting hormone, these genetic replicas root faster to help expedite propagation.
[Julia Sumpter/Leafly]
When introducing new strains or beginning new breeding projects, Caliva starts from seeds or first generation clones to promote vigor and allow farmers to select their best phenotypes.
[Julia Sumpter/Leafly]
Chemdawg OG thrives during the final weeks of flowering.
Hydroponics growing is one of many methods used to cultivate large-scale cannabis for the legal industry. While the process may seem complicated, when executed properly, the system can run efficiently and harmoniously to grow the highest-quality cannabis for consumers and patients.