I do actually have one pleurothallis, which is doing fine and has put out two new leaves.
Surely there must be some point at which - way below 25 ppm - nearly all anions and cations have been removed (true deionized water or ultra pure water) where root membranes can no longer function...
I mean, rainwater is certainly something to aspire to, but sometimes I wonder if rainwater is confused for pure water. Rainwater is not actually pure water - I'm not aware of any source of water on earth that is. But it does bring up what it is exactly we mean by "pure" water. For one thing, surely there is no single standard for "pure" water. It brings to mind questions about whether - and if so - why - rainwater in different regions has more or less minerals in it. And how important - or not - tuning ones water supply to match the bioregional rainwater characteristics of a given species is.
Unless by pure we mean molecularly pure diatomic hydrogen - completely absent of all organic and inorganic solutes... But I imagine but don't know for sure that, just as humans cannot safely drink consume deionized water without causing an electrolyte imbalance, plants cannot safely absorb deionized water - or - water that has been "purified" so far that mineral ion transport into and out of roots grinds to a halt.
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