Aerogarden Elite Manual

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Aerogarden Bounty Elite Manual

ManualAerogarden

Aerogarden Harvest Elite Slim Manual

UPDATE: 12-18-2017:
I have rated my review down to 2 stars due a recent change in customer service by the company. While I like the Bounty, and they still talk about their great warranties, unfortunately they have changed and now support is terrible and they DO NOT HONOR their warranty. Good luck reaching them. I have failed.
The pump in the bounty failed at 8 months, and I also lost some seeds because of that. I figured I'd try their 'guaranteed to grow support, as well as the regular 1 year warranty on the Bounty). So I contacted them for support through both phone and email and I am/was being ignored, then someone responded via email 2 weeks after initial request. In the email it said to try a few things and contact them again. So I proceed to test, and the pump still failed, so I sent them a reply with the information, and also asked to get replacement pods through their guaranteed to grow policy. It's been 3 weeks now and nothing. No pump, no pods, no other response. They have continued to release products, but after this experience I will never purchase anything from them again. Too bad, they don't have real competition.
I will try calling again, but this whole thing left a bad taste..
-- end of update --
I've had the previous top of the line (ultra led) garden for a few years, my review of that unit is several pages long, If you want a lot of detail, including a short video, check my other review. I'll just describe the features, instead of the play by play growth and more on the other. I am rating it as 3 stars, if in 3-4 months my cherry tomatoes grow well, ill bump up the review to 4 star.
Pros:
- Panel saves settings in case of a power outage (this is perhaps the biggest improvement over the ultra which was iffy at best). You do have to reset the time, even if it's just a power flicker, which is annoying, but at least it keeps your other settings (lights on time, lights off time, days planted, and most importantly when is the next day to add nutrients).
- UPDATE: we had a power outage (or flicker) it was just about 1 minute long. Bounty and Ultra all kept the 'days planted' setting, and all kept the light schedule as I had selected. The ultras both lost the time for nutrients (which is really annoying, since it is a process to fix it, and then you have to fix it back. The bounty kept the nutrient setting fine. However, the bounty lost the 'garden type' setting. It got reset from tomatoes, the to the default of herb garden).
- 45 watt panel (please send me a note after March 2017 and I'll comment more on the differences)
- Their guarantee to grow support is slow but good. They have followed through every time. (If a plant doesn't grow, they'll ship you another seed pod free).
Neutral:
- If you want to grow lettuce and basil, the ULTRA LEDor Extra LED are cheaper and do a great job, maybe just as good. So save your money. I've had bad luck with cherry tomatoes on those, and I'm currently growing some on this Bounty, and will update this review in 4 months or so.
- Stainless steel finish is fine, and the extra cost over the regular plastic one is sometimes just $20 dollars depending on the sale. It does look nicer than the plastic.
- The base is identical in size to the ultra/extra LED. They go to the same height, same width, same length. Basically, you aren't getting a bigger garden. They added 2 more holes, which simply means your plants are going to get all stuck together and not have enough space to grow. So you'll probably get just as much produce out of the 7 slot ultra/extra gardens than the 9 slot bounty. To give you an idea, when planting Thai basil (my favorite, I plant 2 or 3 in my Ultra, and they get plenty big to cover the whole space. So I just put plant spacers on the other 4 holes. I'd do the same in this one, so I am not getting more produce.
Cons:
- The pointless panel. So the touch screen panel is being billed as the new and improved thing, the problem is that it's pointless. You just need alerts for water and nutrients, and that's it. A nice touch panel is overkill and adds unnecessary cost to the device. It doesn't have any special features that would make it stand out over the previous regular panel. (other than it storing the settings, but that could have been done with with the previous panel). It's on, always displaying the same data (days planted, water level, etc). Honestly seems like a waste of power and money. Panel should be off unless there was an alert or something. UPDATE: my garden got reset from tomatoes to herb on a small power outage. I could see it highlighted in a different color (like a link?) and I tried tapping on garden type to see if I could set it back to tomato. Well, of course you cannot do that. Again, just further annoyances of how pointless the 'touch screen' is. It's a touch screen, but you can only touch the buttons that appear on it, nothing else. Would be nice if I could tap and garden type to change garden, or on time to change the time. But no, you have to go inside the nested menus and go through a lot of non-intuitive steps to restore things, that could have been a simple tap away.
- If you buy the 'light boosters' from aerogarden, they don't attach as nicely to the stainless steel top part. They attach much better to the ultra led or extra led, this bounty elite has them a little crooked because of the differences in how the light part is changed. Don't get me wrong, they will still work, but you paid for a premium finish and product and this is a warning that they won't look as nicely as others.
- It's going for around twice as much as the ULTRA led, and its simply not worth that much. If you find it for sale (ultra goes for like 150 on sale, this bounty rarely goes below $250). If you can find this one for $240 then I'd consider it, the regular bounty for $200 as well.
They have some with Wifi now too, but honestly, unless you are storing this way out of sight (like down in the garage), I don't see the point of wifi on them.
Overall, this is the best one, looks good, and works well. But the cost increase over the ultra led should give you pause, and depending on the crops you are growing, you should opt for the extra or ultra instead.
Plant your own seeds. (Tips):
Buying their pods can get expensive. Say $20 dollar for the 9 pod cherry tomatoes one. It comes with 4 plants and 5 spacers.
Basically, you are paying almost $5 dollars per seed pod. (it does come with 3 month supply of nutrients).
However, if you ordering directly from aerogarden website (they have permanent 20% off coupons if you search online) You can:
* buy 100 sponges for just around $26 dollars. 26 cents per sponge. (You can save more and buy your own grow media, cut it to size to fit in the garden, make your own holes, but the time to do all that was not worth the savings over the 26 cent sponges I can buy from them and just place a seed and I'm good to go.
* The plastic containers you can reuse (wash with hot soapy water). So you can keep reusing for a bit the ones that come in the set. If you ever run out, you can buy a 50 pack from Aerogarden for around $12 with coupons (always have an offer going), and those should last you several years.
* They sell the labels too, but those are best avoided, you need to iron them to stick them on there, so it's some work to get them going (they are not stickers or something more user friendly). More importantly, you don't truly need them. They help to keep some of the leaves and debris outside the water (which is good) but depending on the crop you can get away without putting any label (say with lettuce) or use foil or something else in its place. You can also try washing and reusing them once or twice from previously used ones.
* Buy seeds at your local stores (Organic lettuce seeds go for $2.50 in the local store, and the pack contains around 1,000 seeds).
* The domes you can reuse indefinitely. Just wash in warm soapy water after use.
* I am currently growing 2 lettuce varieties from the store, and all pods sprouted and are growing well.
So basically, just insert around 3 seeds per pod and reuse all the components you can (except for the grow media, those you got to buy, again you can get them regularly for 100 of them for $26). Tomato seeds are more expensive, (2.50 for a pack of like 40 seeds) but if you think about it, the most I'm going to use is about 9 per planting, and they should last around 6-8 months, so that pack will last me 3-4 years depending on how long the tomatoes are thriving. I have an experiment right now you can ask me about later - I got 2 tomato plants from the local store, and one pod from the aerogarden kit growing right now. For what its worth, the 2 from the store are taller than the one from the Aerogarden cherry tomato kit at this stage. I'll probably start saving seeds from the tomatoes that produce best and just reuse them.
To sum it up, you can save money by using your own seeds. And if you buy the grow media from aerogarden and reuse all the plastic component, you can plant (Without much effort at all) for around 26 cents a pod.
For example: tomatoes: (if you buy with discounts from aerogarden, you'll do $15 dollars at best. Compare that to the 1 dollar you'll spend to have your 4 seeds buying the grow media from aerogarden.
Also tip, aerogarden carries plastic plant spacers (black flat domes) you can use to cover unused holes. They sell for like $5 dollars a pack of 15. I think those are worth it, because the look good and match the same size of the holes (and no effort on your part). You could cut your own and cover it, or do something else, but at $5 dollars for 16 ones that fit perfectly without you spending any time, it's a no brainer.
Again, you can look only and find tips if you want to save the most money, but I got 2 kids and time is limited, so buy the grow media directly from aerogarden, and the plastic pods, and the plant spacers (buy the new black plastic ones, not the previous generation that doesn't last as long and cost more) saves enough time that it's money well spent. buying the $15-$20 dollar replacements was a bit too much, especially for lettuce that you can buy a nice amount in the store for $2 dollars. But with the success I've had growing them directly..
Another money well spent is the seed starting kit. It's about $20 when on sale, and it allows you to start around 30 seedlings during the summer to then transplant outside. Seedlings sometimes have a hard time starting outside, but here they start very easily, and can then be taken outside when they are hardier.
Feel free to ask any questions in the comments, I'll happily answer.