"organic" water?

Picasso345

Well-Known Member
I AGREE WITH SPEED HABIT

My Dad called himself a "shade-tree mechanic" sometimes. But he always did the most quality work with the tools and materials available. Second Time Ive posted this today but I think definitions are in order.

Organic Production and Organic Food: Information Access Tools

I'm probably not cretified organic because my water district uses chlorine. I bubble it for outside and use a distilling and filtering machine by my house for indoor. I feel like a "shade-tree organic gardner", doing the best with the materials at hand.

My lifestyle is also relatively organic (heck next to my neighbor with a Hummer I'm a Buddist monk). I have no qualms with riding my bike to get RO water, I don't own a car, Alas, I may never own such an odious contraption as those fine metal boxes are defined at present.

Love and Peace. (and may we all learn to step lightly on the earth mother)
I agree 100%. Doing the best you can is what's important. Too many people throw up their hands and say if I can't be perfect then to hell with it.
 

thebeerstalkin

Well-Known Member
You will get much better results from filtered, purified, osmosis water when doing organics, becasue even the slightest amount of chlorine will kill that mircrolife you worked so hard to establish.
 

Seamaiden

Well-Known Member
If all you're worried about is chlorine then you don't need to go to all the trouble of reverse osmosis just to remove it.
 

DND

Well-Known Member
And chlorine wont hurt your plants if it is an amount that is acceptable in drinking water. How do I know? I've got tap water that is treated with it and had no but to use it with my DWC grow. It smells like a damn swimming pool right from the faucet and I can't drink it without our filtration system.

Personally speaking I think as long as you can drink it...you can use it. Organics, well they are earth friendly and all that, but cmon it's water. Maybe start collecting rain water or drill a well.
 

thebeerstalkin

Well-Known Member
osmosis removes more than just cholorine, i did an experiment and you could see the difference between the tap water plants and the osmosised water ones...
 

organick

Well-Known Member
I like RO water because it is a blank slate. PH, chlorine, salt, little robots put there by government agencies (kidding about the robots).

Also my tap water is NASTY
 

jointluver

Well-Known Member
........Common sense, thats all i have to say.
use 5.5-6.5 ph water and thats it. and read a little before you post.
 

bloop

Active Member
Yes there is organic water, or so you could say. Water that been revitalized electrically and aerated through clockwise vortex churning will not only rid/lower levels of chlorine, iron, fluoride, organic matter, and etc, it will also stablize the oxygen in the water so that it is not aggressive thus not leaching nutrients from the soil/plants,

More of this research and the amazing wonders it encompasses has been done by Viktor Schauberger a forester who realized how disconnected humanity was from nature, and created technology that mimicked nature. Thus vortex churning of water is something he noticed rivers did to purify water at river bends. Research him if you're into organic gardening for he mentions further things you will not read in many books about how we should use copper tools instead since they do not rust and oxidize which creates an unstable electrical charge in the soil for germination and root growth.

P.S. do not use water that is hot and has been in contact with direct sunlight, especially if motionless. This water is extremely not suited for drinking or plant use, take this water and churn it clockwise which will create a suction vortex in the water which cools it and aerates as well. Make sure it is out of contact with direct light and is an a sphere like vessel ie) a ceramic egg, a barrel, etc Water reaches the deepest parts of the soil when colder than the soil thus aerating it brings it down to its anamoloy temperature of around 39 degrees this though takes an hour or so manually.
 
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s.c.mtn.hillbilly

Well-Known Member
Dude..seriously its F@#%ing water, no water is any more "organic" then the rest, thats just redic. Any water can work fine outside of a set of extreams
what?! all water is definitely NOT the same! city water has chlorine, which kills beneficial microbes and bacteria. and even well water differs greatly by area...even a couple miles! rain water...do you live down wind of an industrial hellhole?...if you cant get good clean water, your next best bet would be r/o.
 

Seamaiden

Well-Known Member
Not to mention, if all water were the same, then how would one explain the differing needs and requirements of different aquatic organisms? I'm not even talking about separating marine from freshwater, just keep it to freshwater organisms. There are vast and myriad differences in water and water quality.

Mtn. Hillbilly.. I'm still a-lookin' for your blog. Nevermind, I just found it. Link it in your siggie, please. And hey, how you doin' with those fires that came up last week?
 

bloop

Active Member
Being on the lower half of the equator would not change the fact that the water needs to be churned clockwise, or centripetally.

The need for the centripetal motion is that when you use centrifugal, or counter-clockwise, churning you're not getting suction which is key here. Counter clockwise spiraling creates expansion which creates friction, heat, gravity, and eventually fire; while clockwise spiraling[churning] creates suction through what is "implosion" in other words the water is moving towards the center of the container not the encompassing border. Since the water is not expanding outwards but impanding inwards it does not create friction thus is not heating but cooling. Thus clockwise motion is key because of the suction it creates, this suctioning takes in air from the surrounding the atmosphere which add in nutrients while stabilizing the chemical balance of the water.

im sorry i am too lazy to explain this in-depth or further more, but if you really want to know more just ask or read up on viktor schuaberger there are books like:

living water water wizard Hidden Nature
The fertile earth - Nature\'s energies in agriculture, soil fertilization and forestry

These books can probably be torrented or something
 
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