Cucumber Growing Guide — Hydroponic Cultivation with Coco Peat Substrate in India

Cucumber is one of the most commercially successful hydroponic crops in India. With a short 3–4 month crop cycle and the ability to run 2–3 rotations per year, it offers excellent returns per square metre for commercial polyhouse farmers.

This guide covers substrate setup, EC and pH management, and the common problems that affect cucumber production in Indian polyhouse conditions.

Cucumber Farming in India — What You Need to Know First

Commercial cucumber production is concentrated in Maharashtra, Gujarat, Karnataka, and Andhra Pradesh. The hydroponic drip growbag system dominates — enabling year-round production and significantly higher yields per square metre than traditional cultivation.

Cucumber grows fast and drinks frequently. It can fill a growbag with roots in just a few weeks. This rapid root growth demands a substrate with strong drainage capacity — it must handle high irrigation frequency without becoming waterlogged between irrigation events.

At a Glance

Crop type Annual fruiting vegetable — short-season, high-yield
Crop cycle 3–4 months
Growing system Drip growbag system — 100×15×14 cm or 100×18×15 cm
Growing regions Maharashtra, Gujarat, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, Haryana, Rajasthan
Season Year-round production under polyhouse
Farm types Small and large commercial polyhouse operations

Step 1 — Setting Up Your Coco Peat Substrate

Cucumber is irrigated very frequently — sometimes multiple times per day in peak summer. The substrate must drain quickly after each event while maintaining enough moisture for the plant’s high water demand. RootPrime (70:30) handles high irrigation frequency much better than 100% coco peat.

Which Kultyv Blend to Use

Recommended blend Kultyv RootPrime (70:30 coco to chips) — handles high irrigation frequency
Growbag size 100×15×14 cm (standard) or 100×18×15 cm for larger varieties
Wash grade Semi Washed — EC 1.0–1.5 mS/cm (cucumber tolerates moderate EC)
Substrate EC target 1.0–1.5 mS/cm at planting
Alternative 8L open-top planter bag for smaller setups

🔗 Kultyv RootPrime — Balanced drainage for vegetables — 70:30 coco to chips — ideal for high-frequency irrigation
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🔗 Kultyv Cucumber Growbag 100×15×14 cm — Standard growbag for commercial cucumber production
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How to Prepare Your Substrate — Step by Step

Step 1. Place RootPrime blocks in the growbag — one or two blocks per bag depending on size.
Step 2. Rehydrate with clean water (pH 5.5–6.0, EC 1.0–1.5 mS/cm) — approximately 3–4 litres per kg.
Step 3. Allow 15 minutes for full rehydration.
Step 4. Check substrate EC — should be 1.0–1.5 mS/cm for semi-washed grade.
Step 5. Check pH — target 5.5–6.0 for cucumber.
Step 6. Pre-buffer with Cal-Mag (2 mL/L) — soak 30 minutes, drain. Transplant seedlings once stable.

✓ Set up drip emitters — 2 drippers per growbag for even moisture distribution across the full bag length.
✓ Start with lower irrigation frequency and increase as the plant grows and root volume fills the bag.
✓ Cut drain holes in growbags — standard 2–3 small slits at the bottom to allow free drainage.

Step 2 — EC and pH Targets by Growth Stage

Cucumber EC is managed progressively — starting low at seedling stage and increasing as the plant develops and begins fruiting. pH is kept consistently at 5.5–6.0 throughout the crop. High nitrogen is needed in vegetative phase; shift to higher potassium during fruiting.

Growth Stage Target EC Target pH Notes
Seedling (0–2 weeks) 1.0–1.5 5.5–6.0 Dilute nutrition to avoid transplant stress
Vegetative growth 1.8–2.2 5.5–6.0 Increase as plant grows rapidly
Flowering 2.0–2.5 5.5–6.0 Consistent nutrition during flower development
Fruiting 2.2–2.7 5.5–6.0 Maintain; harvest every 2–3 days

✓ Cucumber requires frequent EC monitoring — it grows fast and nutrient demands change quickly.
✓ In summer heat, reduce EC slightly (by 0.3 mS/cm) — high temperatures increase water uptake and can concentrate salts.
✓ Harvest every 2–3 days once fruiting begins — leaving fruit on the plant too long reduces subsequent fruit set.

🔗 Free EC & pH Suggester Tool — Enter your crop and stage — get your exact targets
https://kultyv.com/tools/ec-ph-suggester/

Common Problems and How to Fix Them

These are the most common issues cucumber growers face when using coco peat substrate — and how to address them.

Problem: Root Rot (Pythium)

Cause: Overwatering in a drainage-limited substrate creating persistent wet anaerobic conditions.
Fix: Reduce irrigation frequency. Ensure drain holes are clear and functional. RootPrime’s 30% chips content reduces this risk — consider switching from 100% coco if it is your current substrate.

Problem: Powdery Mildew on Leaves

Cause: Fungal disease favoured by poor air circulation in the polyhouse.
Fix: Improve polyhouse ventilation. Avoid wetting leaves during irrigation. Apply preventive fungicide program. Substrate quality is not the cause — this is an airflow issue.

Problem: Short Fruit / Poor Fruit Set

Cause: Low EC during fruiting, temperature above 38°C, or poor pollination (parthenocarpic varieties eliminate the pollination issue).
Fix: Use parthenocarpic cucumber varieties — no pollination required. Maintain EC 2.2–2.5 mS/cm during fruiting. Control polyhouse temperature.

Quick Tips for Cucumber Growers

✓ Use parthenocarpic varieties for consistent fruiting without pollination dependency — standard in commercial production.
✓ Train plants vertically using Dutch V-cord system — maximize space and air circulation.
✓ Harvest cucumber at 20–25 cm length for best market quality — do not let fruit over-mature.
✓ Flush growbags between rotations — target leachate EC below 0.5 mS/cm before replanting.
✓ Cucumber crop cycle is short — rotate to a new bag filling if substrate has compacted after 3 cycles.

Ready to Set Up Your Cucumber Substrate System?

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