Hey All,
I'm planning to cut my tap water with distilled water to lower the TDS for my DWC (5 gal) buckets. I realize this isn't optimal and I'm certainly aware of the pH and nutrient experimentation on my part to find the golden ratio for feeding. What I'm interested in knowing is if the Cal/Mag in my hard water is bioavailable to the plants so that I do not have to concern myself with adding liquid Cal/Mag during feeding. I've seen the posts all over the place about the molecular size of tap water Cal/Mag as being too big. I'd like to understand this better and would really appreciate an explanation or a link to an explanation in greater detail. I emailed General Hydroponics a week ago and here's their reply... [welcome your comments]
I'm planning to cut my tap water with distilled water to lower the TDS for my DWC (5 gal) buckets. I realize this isn't optimal and I'm certainly aware of the pH and nutrient experimentation on my part to find the golden ratio for feeding. What I'm interested in knowing is if the Cal/Mag in my hard water is bioavailable to the plants so that I do not have to concern myself with adding liquid Cal/Mag during feeding. I've seen the posts all over the place about the molecular size of tap water Cal/Mag as being too big. I'd like to understand this better and would really appreciate an explanation or a link to an explanation in greater detail. I emailed General Hydroponics a week ago and here's their reply... [welcome your comments]
Good morning- the information regarding calcium in solution in your source water not being bioavailable is not accurate, anything that is detectable as TDS is going to be available to plants.
FloraMicro Hardwater formula is also discontinued, but was never meant to be a patch for poor water quality, it merely has half the calcium at 2.5% than standard FloraMicro at 5%.
This would compensate for calcium levels in source water around 75 mg/L, but above this- reverse osmosis filtration should be employed.
Take a look at our articles section to learn much more about water quality:
https://generalhydroponics.com/articles/
Thank you
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