Sounds like Ice-9A small amount of fully structured water can structure large amounts of regular water.
Dude, Vonnegut's stories rock!Sounds like Ice-9
I'm glad structured water was brought up. I have some friends that are big proponents of it, mainly for human health vs agriculture. I have other friends who dismiss it as pseudoscience. I haven't done all that much research on it myself, so I'm on the fence. I haven't watched the documentary 'water' yet, but I have done some searches trying to find some legit articles (not testimonials or advertising) about structured water and haven't found much of anything. I found this when looking for opponent's views: http://www.chem1.com/CQ/clusqk.html I don't have enough knowledge of chemistry, but maybe some of you guys can give your thoughts?Google STRUCTURED WATER. Use it. Structured RO is what my indoor garden gets.
I have a simple water structuring setup my dad built for the garden out of a 5 gallon bucket, a couple funnels and two smaller buckets. It has a sub pump that pumps RO to the top funnel where it spins a clockwise vortex, then into a hose to reverse the spin for a counter clockwise vortex in a second funnel, then back into the 5 gal which acts as the 'res' and holds the pump. This simple device will do about 4 gallons at a time.
A 2008 documentary titled 'water' is where he got his idea, and internet research of course. I makes sense to me after hearing what the chinese researcher found doing side by side tests with structured vs regular irrigation water as the only variable changed. The structured water crops required 20% less water, yielded more weight, more nutrition, and had better growth rates and general health. BAM!!!
Basically water has memory based on its supra-molecular structuring, and 90 degree bends and filtering technology like RO destroy the structure (human pipes have LOTS of these) to a point where the water is in a sad state for interactions with biology. It can be structured again by simply flowing in vortexes and other natural bends and also by other means like "love and gratitude" amazing simple nature tech. A small amount of fully structured water can structure large amounts of regular water. Enjoy everybody!
I will get pics of the unit and better citations for structured water when I am back home. Love and Gratitude for everyones input on natural gardening on here and for showing the way to the cootz thread!!!
Interesting post. I took a quick look at this approach but I don't think I know enough about the chemistry. From what I am picking up, the ST breaks down the chloramine into amonia and chlorine. The chlorine disipates naturally or can be removed easily by chemical means. The ammonia is potentially toxic to plants, but at ph below 7 ionizes into ammonium which is not toxic.Sodium thiosulfate will neutralize chlorine and other chems and breaks chloramine down into chlorine in tap water. Sodium thiosulfate is found in molasses and fish hydroslate. RO water still has chloramine.
Interesting post. I took a quick look at this approach but I don't think I know enough about the chemistry. From what I am picking up, the ST breaks down the chloramine into amonia and chlorine. The chlorine disipates naturally or can be removed easily by chemical means. The ammonia is potentially toxic to plants, but at ph below 7 ionizes into ammonium which is not toxic.
Assuming the solution and soil are both below ph 7 (they better be or you will have other problems) are there any potential drawbacks to having the amonium or additional sodium in the soil, particularly as it relates to the wide range of microbes? Is the ammonium broken down further? If so, into what? Anyone else tried this approach to de-clorimine?
That would most definetely be coral rubble from a tank, good stuff.just be sure rinse real well due to possibly being used in a saltwater tankGot a new question...I've been cruising the alleys around my neighborhood for materials...today I was looking for milk crates to put my worm pot on top of...found them and found a 5 gallon bucket almost full of this:
View attachment 2635443
It looks similar to pumice but I don't think it is. Anyone have any ideas what it could be? I was thinking of using it for aeration in the worm bin and garden.
The sources I found were in the context of aquariums - I should have pointed that out. So are you saying that the ammonia/ammonium will evaporate out of solution, ie bubbling in a tea? Will the standard 24 hour aeration do the trick? Guess a standard aquarium ammonia test kit would cover that.With aerating the ammonia will evaporate. Probably what you read was referring to the dangers to fish and plants in aquariums. Chlorine is a catch 22. It will promote root growth but kills all the good bennies.
24 hour aerating will get rid of it. Molasses does its magic in 20 - 30 min per 5 gals.The sources I found were in the context of aquariums - I should have pointed that out. So are you saying that the ammonia/ammonium will evaporate out of solution, ie bubbling in a tea? Will the standard 24 hour aeration do the trick? Guess a standard aquarium ammonia test kit would cover that.
Thanks again. I did just read a post on a gardening forum that suggesting molasses would help but did not offer any reasoning or aeration time. May have to give this a go.24 hour aerating will get rid of it. Molasses does its magic in 20 - 30 min per 5 gals.
How often is recommended to get the growth boosting effect?2tbl puréed aloe Vera per gallon apply foliar