Tact
Learning Everyday
- Joined
- Oct 28, 2009
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I am looking for advice form people who have similar ppm of chloramine in there area: 2.6 ppm.
I was doing some research and my local water provider uses the dreaded chloramine. I did some googling and apparently using sodium thiosulfate to neutralize chloramine (from pet stores/pool chemical providers) results in ammonia being left over in the water, solving 1/2 of the chloramine issue.
So is the ammonia a non-issue for MJ plants, also the use of sodium thiosulfate raises the ppm of several types of metals that will accumulate and eventually be lethal to MJ due the ion binding process? Apparently for fish ammonia is a big issue, and additional steps are needed for aquarium-enthusiast in order to properly treat the water prior to filling their tanks (multi-step filtration process).
That really blows that chloramine is in the water, because this could make watering my MJ plants a potential pain in the ***. I would need to buy a bubbler/air stone and use it for TWO HOURS after applying the sodium thiosulfate to move the chlorine up and out of water in a bucket, then add the nutes, then water. That makes for a three hour process just to get my MJ watered everyday!
Apparently chloramine is measured in my local drinking water at a range from 2.0-3.1 with an average of 2.6 ppm. Arsenic is measured at .9 ppm which is scary, not to mention lead and pesticides cited as run-off and erosion of water pipes. Either way I am a bit miffed if these levels are OK to use for my MJ, or if these are significant ppm levels of chloramine and I need to look into stocking up on sodium thiosulfate, and/or a reverse osmosis machine. Groan. I highly value simplicity, and the idea of lugging gallons of distilled water (which could just as well have chloramine in it for all I know) to my house.
I was doing some research and my local water provider uses the dreaded chloramine. I did some googling and apparently using sodium thiosulfate to neutralize chloramine (from pet stores/pool chemical providers) results in ammonia being left over in the water, solving 1/2 of the chloramine issue.
So is the ammonia a non-issue for MJ plants, also the use of sodium thiosulfate raises the ppm of several types of metals that will accumulate and eventually be lethal to MJ due the ion binding process? Apparently for fish ammonia is a big issue, and additional steps are needed for aquarium-enthusiast in order to properly treat the water prior to filling their tanks (multi-step filtration process).
That really blows that chloramine is in the water, because this could make watering my MJ plants a potential pain in the ***. I would need to buy a bubbler/air stone and use it for TWO HOURS after applying the sodium thiosulfate to move the chlorine up and out of water in a bucket, then add the nutes, then water. That makes for a three hour process just to get my MJ watered everyday!
Apparently chloramine is measured in my local drinking water at a range from 2.0-3.1 with an average of 2.6 ppm. Arsenic is measured at .9 ppm which is scary, not to mention lead and pesticides cited as run-off and erosion of water pipes. Either way I am a bit miffed if these levels are OK to use for my MJ, or if these are significant ppm levels of chloramine and I need to look into stocking up on sodium thiosulfate, and/or a reverse osmosis machine. Groan. I highly value simplicity, and the idea of lugging gallons of distilled water (which could just as well have chloramine in it for all I know) to my house.