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Originally Posted by estación seca
Find your water utility's annual water quality report and find out the total dissolved solids of your water.
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Thanks for the advice! I really had Phalaenopsis struggling hard until I made the change to distilled water. So I take this process as part of my experimentation to see what works best. My collection is small enough to keep me entertained "fiddling" with different techniques until I find the growing technique that is best suited for me.
My area is served by both the Los Angeles Aqueduct Filtration Plant and the Metropolitan Water District's plants of Southern California. They have different readings, being the LA Aqueduct the "better," but on average their readings are:
pH 8.05
TDS 25.98 gpg / 444.7 mg/L
CaCO_3 11.39 gpg / 194.97 mg/L
Chloride 4.7 gpg / 80.45 mg/L
Ca 2.8 gpg / 47.93 mg/L
Mg 1.06 gpg / 18.14 mg/L
K 0.21 gpg / 3.6 mg/L
N 0.14 gpg / 2.4 mg/L
Na 4.5 gpg / 77 mg/L
I would be interested in adventuring into "diluting" this water into distilled or RO water, however, I do wonder if simply controlling the mineral supply from the get go would be easier given that the ranges for these vary widely. Also, my water is really up there in terms of hardness. I'm not extremely good at math but I feel the tap water should be extremely diluted in distilled water in order to have acceptable Mg or Ca levels.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ray
How big is a "part", and in how much water?
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I used grams. Can't remember if I started with a half cup or a quarter cup of fertilizer, but that weighted 60 grams. I then measured 60 grams of Ca(NO_3)_2 and 30 grams of MgSO_4 and set aside without mixing.
I used three different deli 32 oz containers filled with distilled room temperature water and tested the solubility:
- First I mixed the fertilizer (5g) and added 1xCa(NO_3)_2 and 0.5xMgSO_4.
- Then I mixed the MgSO_4 (5g) and then added 2xfertilizer and the 2xCa(NO_3)_2 (which probably was excessive)
– Finally as a last test I mixed the remaining Fertilizer, Calcium Nitrate, and Epsom Salts in their powder form, I shaked them together really well without grinding and I just added a teaspoon of that mix to 32oz of water.
All those experiments deposited.
I did not try mixing the Calcium Nitrate first. However, I've seen recommendations such as diluting each component in boiling water first and then adding into water. The general consensus I've read online is that a) It's impossible; b) Mix the epsom salts first for best results.
I've also considered grinding the fertilizer and the calcium to create a fine powder in order to accelerate solution.
As per the ingredients I used: Calcium Nitrate is from Southern AG 15.5-0-0-19Ca and comes in spherical granules, the fertilizer is Green Care MSU RO and also comes in spherical granules, the Epsom Salts are 100% MgSO_4 from Whole Foods (No oils, fragrances, etc.).