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  #1  
Old 09-13-2020, 07:22 AM
marcoeverard marcoeverard is offline
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I got a water report but I have no idea what it means see attached. Does anyone understand this and if so how would it affect my feeding regime?
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Old 09-13-2020, 03:33 PM
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estación seca estación seca is offline
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Originally Posted by marcoeverard View Post
I got a water report but I have no idea what it means see attached. Does anyone understand this and if so how would it affect my feeding regime?
For a gardener the pertinent parts of a water report are the pH and the information dealing with how much total mineral is dissolved in the water. Almost all the total mineral dissolved in the water consists of calcium and magnesium salts. These two elements are essential nutrients to plants, so gardeners need to ensure the plants get them from the water, or from fertilizing.

A municipal water supply in the US is highly unlikely to have significant amounts of any toxic substances because they test so frequently.

Your pH is shown as 7.16-7.64. This is tolerable for most orchids. A lot of people recommend pH in the range 5.5-6.5 for orchids. When mixed with various fertilizers the pH of your water might come down (that is, become more acidic.) If you wanted, after mixing your desired fertilizer, you could measure the pH of your solution, and adjust it to the pH you desire. pH is very important because the elements needed by plants are more readily available at a pH somewhat lower than neutral, which is 7.0. Even with lots of calcium in my water, the pH of 8.0-8.5 makes most of that unavailable to plants unless I use acid to bring the pH of my water down. (I do that.) If you search online for "plant mineral absorption pH chart" you will find a standard chart to show this.

Some suppliers report total mineral content in milligrams of dried precipitate. Yours reports the electrical conductivity (EC.) Electrical conductivity is a measure of the number of electrical charges on charged ions in a solution. In most water systems this is mostly calcium and magnesium. These are important elements to plants, so they do matter quite a bit. The other metal ions listed on the first page contribute to this, but they are in very small amounts. If you know the EC, and the other things present in your water, you can calculate how much combined calcium and magnesium are in there, but you can't calculate exactly how much calcium and magnesium.

However, reports always show the the maximum tolerable amount of substances in the samples. In your report this is in the column labeled PCV (relaxed.) For EC the standard is 2,500 uS/cm. In other words, if there were enough calcium and magnesium to reach an EC of 2,500, the water would be unacceptable. At that level mineral deposits would accumulate on everything, and plug pipes relatively quickly.

The report shows the EC in your water is minimum 680.000, maximum 1100.00, with a mean of 859.583. That means there is substantial amount of calcium and magnesium in your water, 35% on average of the maximum tolerable.

So, if I were in your position, I would use any fertilizer with trace nutrients, and adjust the concentration based on the amount of nitrogen I wanted to give. If I used MSU fertilizer I would choose the one for well or tap water, not the one for pure water. I would use neither calcium nor magnesium supplements because there is plenty of both in the water. I would measure the pH of my fertilizer solution and adjust it to a value of about 6.5.

You can measure pH with paper test strips, liquid test kits sold at aquarium or swimming pool stores, or pH meters. A good meter is very expensive. I use an aquarium test kit because I already have it for my aquaria. I use vinegar to adjust my pH, but I don't grow in clay pots. I've been told using vinegar to adjust pH leads to rapid growth of algae on clay pots, which breaks them down to crumbles. People growing in clay pots can adjust with something called N-pHuric acid, bought at an agricultural supply store. A local hydroponics shop will also have products to lower or raise pH.
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