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Major Update: Bitcoin Mining Heat-Capture Season 2025 HeatHarvest Greenhouse / Proof-of-Growth: Purple Sweet Potatoes & Crawfish, Vlog 2: Claws & Roots , Move-In, Tune-Up, and Flip to Spring. This Vlog features several big upgrades: Insulated, layered floor: Rubberized PVC, coconut coir, and cement "layered", insulated concrete slab so our precious Bitcoin heat isn’t wicked into the earth. Detailed post on the layered insulated concrete will be added to this thread soon. Crawfish move-in: Two breeding tanks plus the orange stock tub now hold backup breeders and bulk crawfish stock. We also built and assembled a custom vertical hydroponics growing system that ties directly into the stock tub. Biological synergy: Crawfish produce ammonia that microbes convert to nitrite and then nitrate for the plants. As plants take up these nutrients, they scrub the water, creating a cleaner, healthier environment for the crawfish and steady feed for the plants. Temporary automated heating: A modified S19j Pro running a two-hashboard, 120 V modded configuration is keeping the HeatHarvest greenhouse warm, even after a recent drop to 20 F. A simple thermostat brings the #Bitcoin miner online with target of 80 F; so far, temperatures have held between 60–77 F. With winter setting in, the rig hasn’t turned off, so we’re steadily mining Bitcoin and producing HEAT. Purple sweet potatoes moved in: Twelve 10-gallon grow bags filled with organic soil and our cloned purple sweet potatoes grown from seed potatoes over the spring/summer are now in place, for roughly 960 pounds of total grow soil medium in the greenhouse. Flip to “spring”: We switched the greenhouse to 24-hour light, sun by day, and an auto-switch runs the grow lights from dusk till dawn. This extended photoperiod, drives aggressive vegetative growth and pushes the HeatHarvest greenhouse into “spring.” Status: So far, so good. It took two days to dial in all systems. The real challenge was balancing the closed, circular system between the crawfish stock tank and the vertical hydroponics system. We officially switched to spring conditions three days ago, and we’re already seeing spinach seedlings showing strong growth. What’s next for Vlog 3 Command Console: Time to give the console some attention and make the HeatHarvest greenhouse as smart and automated as possible. This will house the automation “brain” and our more permanent heating system. We’re waiting on a unique piece of Bitcoin-mining hardware for the final heating setup, it’s going to be very special. Stay tuned. More spinach starts: Germinate and raise seedlings to 4 inches in a 50/50 coco coir + perlite blend. This keeps roots in a loose medium for easy transfer into the vertical hydroponics system, fed by nutrient-rich water from the crawfish stock tank. Healthy crawfish: Keep parameters dialed so breeding ramps up and egg production begins. Build the smart M.O.E.M. (Mining Operation Environmental Monitor), HeatHarvest Monitor (open source): Custom PCB + hardware + firmware (released free and open source on the HeatHarvest GitHub). It will monitor temperature, humidity, O₂, and CO₂, and send email/notification alerts on anomalies (e.g., sudden temperature drops). It will also log long-term data for this season and future HeatHarvest runs. Also feature a web app that allows us to monitor the HeatHarvest greenhouse 24/7 remotely. Sponsorship stickers: We also need to add our permanent sponsorship stickers. The greenhouse humidity destroyed several sticker rounds, so we’ve ordered permanent vinyl replacements for the sponsor banner. Current plants in the HeatHarvest greenhouse: Purple sweet potatoes, spinach, mint, avocados, and Japanese honeysuckle with more to come as space allows. Countless micro-projects are underway before Vlog 3. Stay tuned, I’ll keep this thread updated until the next Vlog is live. Would like to welcome our latest Sponsor Ungovernable Misfits. Interested in sponsoring? There’s still time DM or email us. Sponsors: Bitsbetrippin: bitsbetrippin.io ... Bitcoin Mining World: bitcoinminingworld.com ... MegaMiner: megaminer.market ... Ungovernable Misfits https://blossom.primal.net/66633be955c30fb1b140ec345012e7a4a76e5cb807d561d8174be6e507b15cd7.mov
2025-11-12 21:48:05 from 1 relay(s) 4 replies ↓
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These crawfish can handle very low temperatures, as long as the water stays above freezing. We originally considered shrimp, but they would have required more specialized equipment. Given our limited project budget, we chose a species that can still produce a meaningful amount of protein, yet is tough enough to tolerate temperature swings and only needs modest equipment and resources. In the future would love to add shrimp to the systems.
2025-11-13 15:30:55 from 1 relay(s) ↑ Parent Reply
The floor of the HeatHarvest greenhouse is built as a thermal shield so our Bitcoin heat stays in the space instead of being wicked into the ground. We stripped everything out , disassembled the structure, and excavated to about 12 inches. From the ground up, the new stack-up is: -Creek rock gravel for drainage and a stable base -Rubberized sheet membrane thermal barrier -Coco coir + cement insulating layer, thermal buffer -High-strength concrete slab, gently sloped toward a center drain for easy wash-down and water management -Concrete liquid sealer to protect and finish the slab This configuration turns the concrete slab into a true heat capture slab instead of a heat waster. The slab becomes the main thermal mass inside the greenhouse, while the insulated layer and membrane below it slow heat loss into the earth. The result is a tougher, drier, and far more heat-efficient floor, purpose designed and built for the Bitcoin HeatHarvest greenhouse. The images above of the cement and coco-coir “concrete burritos” are sample sections we made to test different mixtures. Wish we could’ve finished it with tile and grout this year, it will definitely be a project for next HeatHarvest season. image image image
2025-11-13 17:13:26 from 1 relay(s) ↑ Parent Reply