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May 22, 2008 12:40 PM PDT

AeroGarden grows up

by Brian Krepshaw

The AeroGarden: The world's first kitchen garden appliance.

(Credit: AeroGrow)

You know those space-age countertop gardens that you've seen on TV and in specialty in-flight magazines? They are called AeroGardens and they're popularity continues to, well, grow. According to their news release today, AeroGrow International (NASDAQ: AERO) secured a bountiful harvest of another type of green from several banks and investors. With a market capitalization just over twice the size of their new line of credit, the company seems to be betting on some big crop returns this fall when it expands its line of products.

The AeroGarden uses the dirt-free growing method called aeroponics. "Plant roots are suspended in air within a 100 percent humidity, highly-oxygenated growing chamber." Aeroponics has been around a long time, with NASA experimenting with it starting in the '60s. Richard Stoner first brought commercial varieties to market in the '80s, and today the technology is used around the world. While aeroponics, the process, may continue to flourish, the goal of AeroGrow, the company is to get you to purchase a garden for your own kitchen.

The company sells not only the AeroGarden units, but also the highly profitable seed kits that go with them. Each seed kit is tailored to a specific growth cycle, thereby limiting the amount of mixing and matching one can do, but they do offer many different kits. At twenty bucks a pop, it might at first blush seem like a pretty hefty price to pay for herbs you can find at the grocery store--herbs which you then must wait for to grow--however, there really is no substitute for fresh herbage. With a promised harvest time of four to five months, the cost effectiveness becomes apparent.

With their new funding in place, AeroGrow is betting on a rosy outlook for the future, and with more than 1,000,000 seed kits already sold, it's not hard to imagine a garden for every home.

Brian Krepshaw is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET.
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by Greatgift November 1, 2008 5:07 PM PDT
I thought other readers would enjoy an activity I got at the botanical gardens. Have you or your children "Ever Seen a Plant Move When You Tickle It?" If you wanted to share your love for nature with your children, here is an activity I have done with mine. This may change the way you and the kids react to plants for ever. Imagine giving your children some seeds. Having them watch them sprout and grow. Then shortly after the second leaves appear they tickle the plant and it moves its branches down and closes its leaves! Give them more than a gift; give them a learning experience they will never forget. I found information and my growing kits at www.ticklemeplant.com
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Having transformed the den and the living room, technology is about to revolutionize the kitchen and even the laundry room. Manufacturers are increasingly cramming silicon into everything from refrigerators to spoons, and you can count on CNET's technology experience to follow and explain these trends. In this blog, you'll find the good, the bad, the priceless, the useless, and everything that fits in between, brought to you by a team of culinary professionals and technology experts from CNET and its network of bloggers.

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