Relying on cleen water is a serious issue as these clean ...has very little calcium, so top up your babe every 2-3 drinks with a pinch of cal-mag...or better mix it in 66% local to 33% bought in!
You can buy a tap water filter for not very much and the filters are interchangable and will last about 100 gallons. I cant remember the brand name thoughThank you for your input guy's/girls? I guess I need to try some things and maybe sacrifice
one or two to see what works best. I just know as they grow the leaves from bottom to top
yellow out and get crispy.
That's the question, I always used regular tap water and after whatever pathogen built up inIt's dependent on what's in your water that is bad. What's the mysterious pathogen ?
No, wasn't aware that I could get that information. Will that attract undo notice to my project?What your tap PPM/PH? Have you looked up a local water quality report to see what's in your water? What makes you think it's bad?
It won't attract attention, it should be available online..if you're in the U.S. just google local water quality for your town/city. Or if you want to call the town, and you need an excuse..exotic fish.No, wasn't aware that I could get that information. Will that attract undo notice to my project?
It won't attract attention, it should be available online..if you're in the U.S. just google local water quality for your town/city. Or if you want to call the town, and you need an excuse..exotic fish.
That Home Depot water test is a kinda a scam..it doesn't really have to do with water quality..even thought they will test that..they want to get in your house to do a "water quality evaluation" and sell you more efficient appliances/filters, etc. to help reduce your water usage. I was grabbed by a girl promoting it yesterday...no thanks.
If you're in the US, the federal government requires water providers to publish an "annual water quality report." The important parts (to me) would be ppm, ca and mg. You want the ppm to be around 150. The ca:mg ratio should be 2:1 to 3:1. If the ppms are too high, you can mix it with RO (filtered) water to get something in the range of 120-220ppm.That's the question, I always used regular tap water and after whatever pathogen built up in
the soil it would burn out from bottom to top.
Much appreciated info AZ, I am buying purified water for now ($.98 per gallon) and using it quicklyIf you're in the US, the federal government requires water providers to publish an "annual water quality report." The important parts (to me) would be ppm, ca and mg. You want the ppm to be around 150. The ca:mg ratio should be 2:1 to 3:1. If the ppms are too high, you can mix it with RO (filtered) water to get something in the range of 120-220ppm.
Some water quality reports don't include ppm. You may need to spend $15-$20 on an HM TDS-3 meter on Amazon.
If you buy a filter it must be an RO filter if you want to reduce ppm. Or, you can buy it by the gallon in dispensing machines. Those carbon filters usually found for home use will only remove odors and chlorine (maybe some other stuff). The ppms will remain the same. And, the effect of chlorine is overstated in soil. There's so little of it in tap water that it will be exhausted when it meets any significantly unsanitary condition (such as soil). You can spit or put a pinch of sugar in the water to stimulate bacterial growth to exhaust the santitizer.
I'm up in MA and we are on aquifers also. I just went to my towns website( which really sucks btw..) and to the water dept. section and they had the last 5 yrs reports avail. as PDF. I did have to dig around a bit to find it.Much appreciated info AZ, I am buying purified water for now ($.98 per gallon) and using it quickly
for my small girls and I put an Afghani in a larger pot that's really sucking it down I'm sure until the
canopy shades the soil. Checked for water quality for MA online but it's apparently groundwater and
I need to call them during the week. They don't post it online.
That sounds like a solid plan, I am sure it's a hard water problem not chlorine. As I said above, I don't thinkI'm up in MA and we are on aquifers also. I just went to my towns website( which really sucks btw..) and to the water dept. section and they had the last 5 yrs reports avail. as PDF. I did have to dig around a bit to find it.
Buying water at almost $1/gal you may want to consider a RO filter. According to my town it's $0.004 /gal out of the tap. I've been using tap for the last couple weeks but my town is doing a crap load of water main work now and our water keeps getting all F'ed up..i had 40gals of rusty water in my holding tank yesterday..awesome...
Do you have a water softener in the house? And if so and you were using water that had been softened then sodium build is likely the problem.