What's your tap water ppm?

blueberrymilkshake

Well-Known Member
I bought a big bottle of cal/mag before I tested my water for ppm/ec...and it's a damn good doorstop.

Also, after I realized my water was a bit over 200ppm, I switched my GH Trio micro out for the hardwater micro and it was an excellent move. I pretty much never cal/mag my water.
My calmag is a paper weight hah, I feel you man. I use maxi and I'm not sure if it's made for hardwater, but RO is finicky by comparison for me.
 

twentyeight.threefive

Well-Known Member
Since it’s coco they’ve probably upped the cal and Mag to compensate compared to some others. What brand are you using?

My nutrients schedule from the company calls for added Epsom salts in flower and probably doesn’t account for soft water area.

If I don’t use calmag deficiencies always appear mid flower
Jack's 3-2-1. Part B is calcium nitrate and epsom salts added in.
 

xtsho

Well-Known Member
Is Portland’s water soft or hard?
Bull Run water—Portland’s main water supply—is very soft. It typically has a total hardness of 3–8 parts per million (ppm), or ¼ to ½ a grain of hardness per gallon. Portland’s groundwater supply is moderately hard: about 80 ppm, or about 5 grains per gallon.

What is the pH of Portland’s water?
The pH of Portland’s drinking water typically ranges between 7.5 and 8.5.

  • Portland’s water system was established in 1895.
  • Portland’s drinking water system delivers water from two high-quality sources – the Bull Run Watershed and the Columbia South Shore Well Field – to almost one million people in Portland and surrounding communities.
  • Most of Portland’s drinking water comes from the Bull Run Watershed, 26 miles east of downtown Portland.



 

lusidghost

Well-Known Member
What I'd like to know is why do different brand have different ratios of calnit? Jack's is 15. NPK RAW is 9. Assuming they are both buying for a third party, is there a calcium concentrate that they add additional nitrogen to, or are they just the product of different processes of extraction?
 

Dorian2

Well-Known Member
By the meter I have:

PPM for meter.jpg

According to the city daily water quality site it's 242

I'll go with the city considering their test equipment is better than my $15 unit.
 
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xtsho

Well-Known Member
What I'd like to know is why do different brand have different ratios of calnit? Jack's is 15. NPK RAW is 9. Assuming they are both buying for a third party, is there a calcium concentrate that they add additional nitrogen to, or are they just the product of different processes of extraction?
The 9-0-0 RAW is calcium nitrate and magnesium sulfate. If you look at the label it shows they're using a 15-0-0 calcium nitrate. Their RAW Nitrogen which is 20-0-0 is ammonium sulfate.

Yara's calcium nitrate is 15.5-0-0 and is likely what most companies use. Haifa has a 17-0-0 calcium nitrate as well. There's also PureCal at 13-0-0 which is what I think is the VitaGrow I've been using for years.

 
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LeastExpectedGrower

Well-Known Member
I always ask if weeds and grass are happy under an outside faucet.
In all honesty...it depends. I don't water our grass (Trying to keep as much water in our well as possible), but some of our plants like our hydrangeas much prefer me to use an acidifier and have done way better once I did.
 

lusidghost

Well-Known Member
The 9-0-0 RAW is calcium nitrate and magnesium sulfate. If you look at the label it shows they're using a 15-0-0 calcium nitrate. They're RAW Nitrogen which is 20-0-0 is ammonium sulfate.

Yara's calcium nitrate is 15.5-0-0 and is likely what most companies use. Haifa has a 17-0-0 calcium nitrate as well. There's also PureCal at 13-0-0 which is what I think is the VitaGrow I've been using for years.

I'm have trouble following. How do they get the nitrogen down to 9 if the starting point is 15? Is it just filler? How is that not diluting the calcium ratio?
 
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LeastExpectedGrower

Well-Known Member
Blueberries like acidic soil as well. I water from the tap but I've added sulfur to the soil and amend yearly.
Blueberries, holly, rhododendrons (along with others) all like acidic soil of different levels. Roses are right in the middle, but I do add bonemeal for the phosphorus.

Many many plants will do just fine as long as your water/soil are not extremes, but if you want plants to flower or grow their best it's often a good practice to get it into its 'comfy zone' with all factors (light, temp, humidity, soil, water) to get the most you can from them. And at 10$ up for a decent seed most cannabis growers are doing more than just trying to get their plants to survive and be 'ok' they're asking them to produce to what I'd consider an 'unnatural level'. So getting the details right certainly doesn't hurt.
 

xtsho

Well-Known Member
I'm have trouble following. How do they get the nitrogen down to 9 if the starting point is 15? Is it just filler? How is that not diluting the calcium ratio?
The nitrogen ratio is reduced due to the addition of magnesium sulfate. The 9-0-0 NPK product is just a dry form of calmag. It's not 100% calcium nitrate. You can start with 15-0-0 calcium nitrate but after you've modified the ratio by adding something else you're no longer at a 15-0-0 percentage by weight. You could mix calcium nitrate with bread flower and the NPK would be lower than the 15-0-0 you started out with.

NPK calculations are based off of the weight of each nutrient so as you reduce the weight of a specific nutrient in a blend it's NPK number is going to go down.
 

lusidghost

Well-Known Member
The nitrogen ratio is reduced due to the addition of magnesium sulfate. The 9-0-0 NPK product is just a dry form of calmag. It's not 100% calcium nitrate. You can start with 15-0-0 calcium nitrate but after you've modified the ratio by adding something else you're no longer at a 15-0-0 percentage by weight. You could mix calcium nitrate with bread flower and the NPK would be lower than the 15-0-0 you started out with.

NPK calculations are based off of the weight of each nutrient so as you reduce the weight of a specific nutrient in a blend it's NPK number is going to go down.
Oooooh. Yeah, that makes sense. I wasn’t accounting for the mag. Thanks, I’ve been wondering about that for a few months now.
 
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