The present invention pertains to flexible or rigid plant vessels. In particular, the present invention pertains to generally hollow vessels that are made of flexible or rigid materials and shaped to occupy minimal space and maintain maximal volume for growth of plant roots, be adaptable to different positions and optimize growth of plants for domestic or agricultural purposes.
When growing plants traditionally, in soil or containers there is a need for suitable space and extensive use of resources such as growing medium, nutrients and water. Among the various methods exists today for growing plants are the use of open ground, water-filled containers (in hydroponic agriculture), greenhouses and growing on shelves or perforated tubes and multipurpose tanks of various shapes and sizes. All the above suffer from several disadvantages compared to the present invention—They require the use of a wide space or container adjusted to the roots of the plant and the use of a lot of growing medium for the purpose of filling this space or container, which also leads to increased use of nutrients and increased use of resources due to evaporation and water infiltration.
US 2015/0342130A1 describes a limited method for spiral routing, only in helix shape sunk into a flowerpot and rising from the bottom of the flowerpot upwards the rim of the flowerpot. Contrary to the foregoing, the proposed invention deals with independent units which substitute a planter or a pot and are not necessarily hidden. In contrast to the mentioned invention, the amount of growing medium required in the present invention is the amount of growing medium required to fill the tube only, which makes it lightweight for use on roofs. The uniqueness of the proposed invention is its ability to be hung, placed on a surface, and attached to bars. In addition, it has added aesthetic value especially in a transparent tube, especially in hydroponic growth. It should be noted that today there are many methods for routing stems and plant branches, mainly for ornamental purposes.
WO 2014/175619 describes a flower arrangement tube for beautifying a surrounding environment. The wall of the tube is perforated on and along with a plurality of holes with at predetermined intervals between them, and into which different types of plant or flower decorations, natural or artificial, may be inserted. The volume of the tube can be filled with fillers such as polystyrene foam or floral foam. Otherwise, a support tube can be inserted into the flower arrangement tube to support the flowers without fillers. The tube itself can be flexible and freely bent.
U.S. Pat. No. 9,125,349 describes a self-contained gardening system that utilizes a continuous tubular structure raised on stringer supports that provide a spiral configuration. The tubular section comprises ports that allow planting along its length. The system also comprises a porous hose within to water the plants and provide them with nutrients. Port covers may be provided to inhibit rain, insects, pests, diseases and outer undesirables from gaining access to the soil and plant roots.
US 2016/249522 describes a seed tape with seeds embedded at a spacing distance from one another in a tubular sleeve. The sleeve is a textile tube, which encloses the seeds in a stretched manner before or during germination and is unstretched between the seed positions. The seeds are embedded in at least one substrate or are in contact with such substrate. This planting system may also comprise a tubular or pipe-like irrigation system with a coating, which can be made of a waterproof synthetic material and having pores, from which irrigation liquid can exit.
The walls of all the plant growth tubes in these publications are necessarily perforated to enable the planting and growing of plants along them. The planting at their end exits is not even considered, because the objective is to plant vertically along the tubes walls. Using these tubes for planting only at their exits will require sealing the holes in the tubes walls. This is actually suggested in these publications, but with covers that are removable, and which do not form a solid and continuous layer or sheet with the walls of the tube. This causes a problem when attempting to convert these tubes and their use to a tube in which the plants grow only in the tubes end exits. None of these publications teaches, describes or suggests a plant growth tube or vessel that is made of a single, solid and continuous sheet without any perforations or holes along its walls, where such tube or vessel enables to grow plants at its end exits, hold any filling within its volume, prevent evaporation of water to the surroundings and infiltration of pests and infections through the walls and be oriented essentially at any angle relative to the ground without spilling off of its filling as long as its end exits face up.
It is, therefore, an object of the present invention to deal with the routing of plant roots for the purpose of achieving excessive efficiency of resources.
It is yet another object of the present invention to provide hollow vessels for growing plants, where such vessels are made of flexible or rigid materials and can be shaped in different forms to adapt to hanging or placing of the plants and occupying minimal space.
This and other objects and embodiments of the invention will become apparent as the description proceeds.
This present invention provides aesthetic, cost-effective hollow vessels for accommodating and growing plants. Such vessels use the same principle with agricultural and domestic applications that allows rooting the shape of the root in a spiral or convoluted manner and thereby to achieve a significant reduction in the plant's requirements for soil depth, growing medium, fertilizers and water, since these substances remain concentrated in the cavity of the hollow vessels for the sole use of the plant and do not disperse. Further, this principle as applied to the hollow vessels of the present invention allows more plants to grow on the same space, because of their elasticity that enables to fold them to occupy less space and place several of them in a defined volume.
In one embodiment, the present invention provides a vessel for cultivating plants, where such vessel comprises
a hollow body; and
openings at opposite ends of said body, where the body is made of a flexible or rigid material that enables to shape the vessel in configurations so that the aerial distance between the open ends of the body is smaller than the total length of the body, and where the body is filled with a growing medium for growing said plants. The wall of the vessel is a single solid sheet that is continuous along length of the vessel and between the opposite ends of the vessel. The wall is designed or manufactured to manipulate routing roots of the plants within the volume of the vessel, along the length of the vessel and from one end to opposite end of the vessel.
In one aspect, the present invention uses a simple geometric principle as mentioned above for a variety of hollow vessels for routing plant roots by planting in a hollow body, which outlines the shape of the roots. These vessels can be filled with a growth medium that is most suitable for the growth of the particular plant and with the right amount and density for it. Such growth medium may be selected from soil, silicate beads, porous gravel, tuff, pebble stones, water, hydroponic substrate and any other substrate that enables growth of roots, absorption of nutrients and pest control.
The vessels are hollow bodies that can be made from a variety of materials—breathable, non-breathable, transparent, opaque, hard, porous or spongy. The bodies can be shaped in a variety of shapes and sizes, among them spiral and curvy wave shapes. In one particular embodiment, the number of bends or twists is determined according to the expected length of the plant roots. The twists or bends, as the case may be, have a relatively moderate slope that allows the plant roots to grow optimally, while directing them to the required shape.
In one particular embodiment, depending on the specific design, the body may have one or more openings. The diameter of the openings can be equal to or different from each other or from the diameter of the body and may create a cone like shape for more convenient irrigation and cultivation. If required, the ends of the body can be shaped perpendicular or parallel to the direction of the windings.
In still another embodiment, drainage of excess water and ventilation of the roots can be done with the use of porous materials or creation of dedicated perforations or holes in the body. In still another particular embodiment, the walls of the body enable ventilation of the growth medium inside the body and/or expel of water and or evaporation of water. Such fluid communication between the growth medium and the surroundings of the vessel allows controlling the levels of humidity and air inside the growth medium by expelling excessive water and exchanging and refreshing air. Further, the design of the vessels creates a relatively large surface to volume ratio due to their twisted design. Such ratio reduces the exposure of the growth medium in the body to the surroundings and as a result generates a significant decrease in escape of humidity out of the growth medium. This in turn keeps the humidity inside the medium in the body and saves watering costs.
The vessels can be buried in the ground. Also they can be hung or laid down horizontally or vertically in such a way that the length or depth required to populate roots of a certain length is dramatically reduced. Therefore, when growing on floors or shelves the required distances between unit to unit are significantly smaller than those between regular pots.
In one embodiment, the vessels of the present invention can also be used as a decorative accessory by hanging on walls, fences, vertical surfaces such as building walls, windows or balcony bars, especially in their transparent version that allows viewing the roots in hydroponic growth. Particularly, the vessels can even be used as pots themselves.
In one particular embodiment, rigid vessels of the present invention are made of materials selected from clay, ceramics, porcelain, glass, concrete, polyester, plaster, canvas or utah fabric, metals or metallic materials and combinations thereof. Such rigid vessels are designed in advance to guide the roots of a plant to grow in certain direction in a medium that fills their volume. Further, such vessels can be in fluid communication with the surroundings with holes made in their walls to allow proper ventilation and/or water evaporation off of the growth medium to the surroundings.
Alternatively, the walls of such rigid vessels may block unidirectional or bidirectional flow of air and/or water and/or water vapor between the growth medium inside the vessels and their surroundings.
In still another particular embodiment, the vessels of the present invention are suitable for threading on and hanging off of elevated cables. Particularly, the cables may carry a plurality of hanging vessels, where the cables stretch between vertically positioned poles or pillars, which are positioned parallel each other. Still in another particular embodiment, the cables may be stretched between such poles or pillars in a single or a plurality of heights above ground, and the vessels may hang down in corresponding single or plurality of levels.
The following details some advantages of the hollow, flexible or rigid vessels of the present invention:
In what follows and in accordance with the previous paragraphs, a detailed description of preferred non-limiting embodiments of the invention is disclosed for the hollow vessels for growing plants without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention.
Another particular example is the cone shape of the upper part of the body that gradually expands towards the opening. This can be seen in the difference between the smaller diameter, d3, of the lower base of the cone and the bigger diameter, d1, of the opening, which is the upper base of the cone.
It should be noted that the different configurations illustrated in
It should be noted that the hollow shape of the vessels of the present invention is only exemplary to the various shapes that such vessels can have. In other non-limiting particular embodiments of the present invention, the vessels can be rectangular, hexagonal or octagonal. These and other shapes are contemplated within the scope of the present invention as long as their flexibility enables to shape them in compact configurations, which are the same or similar to the configurations as illustrated in the present invention. Further, such shapes of vessels may be made of similar or same materials as detailed above and have similar or same characteristics such as ventilation, perforation and hydrophilic or hydrophobic qualities.
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 278002 | Oct 2020 | IL | national |