Spraying And Sprinkling With Compost Tea
What exactly would you use as a hose sprayer when spraying your plants with compost tea? And what exactly would you use as an inline feeder for applying compost tea to your lawn when sprinkling?
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Yeah, a watering can is exactly what I've seen other tea makers use, as well. I don't think that there is substantial benefit to using a mister as opposed to this.The Helpful Gardener wrote:Assuming you are on chlorinated water (from another post), I would use neither...
I use a watering can myself...
HG
The microbes do their best work in the soil, anyhow .
I plan on using a chlorine filter. And lol, really a watering can for my lawn? That would take a very, very long time. After reading teaming with microbes they suggest for your lawn an inline fertilizer dispenser for your sprinkler but can't really find anything like this. Do you know where to find what they were talking about?The Helpful Gardener wrote:Assuming you are on chlorinated water (from another post), I would use neither...
I use a watering can myself...
HG
Edit: Also, it's hard to get the bottom of leaves with a watering can.
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Dec, this is probably the finest thing you can do for your soil. There are some work arounds for the worst of it (in a unconfined space like a bucket or open barrel the chlorine gasses off).
The fluoride and chloramine most city water systems insist we need (I'd be happy to go without) do not and should be filtered if you can. That stuff is meant to kill things and it's very good at it; what about that sounds good for soil or for you?
HG
P.S. dec, also consider that if your lawn is so big you cannot inoculate it with a watering can (or water it for that matter), you likely have too much lawn... A thought...
The fluoride and chloramine most city water systems insist we need (I'd be happy to go without) do not and should be filtered if you can. That stuff is meant to kill things and it's very good at it; what about that sounds good for soil or for you?
HG
P.S. dec, also consider that if your lawn is so big you cannot inoculate it with a watering can (or water it for that matter), you likely have too much lawn... A thought...
I would imagine something like this would filter the flouride and chloramine too, wouldn't you think? https://www.amazon.com/Camco-40043-TastePURE-Flexible-Protector/dp/B0006IX87S/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=automotive&qid=1268035598&sr=8-1The Helpful Gardener wrote:Dec, this is probably the finest thing you can do for your soil. There are some work arounds for the worst of it (in a unconfined space like a bucket or open barrel the chlorine gasses off).
The fluoride and chloramine most city water systems insist we need (I'd be happy to go without) do not and should be filtered if you can. That stuff is meant to kill things and it's very good at it; what about that sounds good for soil or for you?
HG
P.S. dec, also consider that if your lawn is so big you cannot inoculate it with a watering can (or water it for that matter), you likely have too much lawn... A thought...
As for the lawn, I'm going to be working on more perennial beds in my front yard this spring, but even as it is now I have a lot of garden to handle with just one person. As for my backyard I have a dog and he likes to run around and I don't like having to clean the mud from him so that lawn will stay.
The Helpful Gardener wrote:Dec, this is probably the finest thing you can do for your soil. There are some work arounds for the worst of it (in a unconfined space like a bucket or open barrel the chlorine gasses off).
The fluoride and chloramine most city water systems insist we need (I'd be happy to go without) do not and should be filtered if you can. That stuff is meant to kill things and it's very good at it; what about that sounds good for soil or for you?
HG
P.S. dec, also consider that if your lawn is so big you cannot inoculate it with a watering can (or water it for that matter), you likely have too much lawn... A thought...
..........and not enough garden . Flower beds are good too, though.
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I have two barrels in back by the veggies and one on the front porch for the flower gardens. Contemplating a third for the back this year; you cannot have too many, methinks.
My barrels are a fairly intricate system and I wouldn't brew in them because they are impossible to clean out easily, and you better be cleaning or you will get biofoilm build up and that eventually means anaerobic conditions.
HG
My barrels are a fairly intricate system and I wouldn't brew in them because they are impossible to clean out easily, and you better be cleaning or you will get biofoilm build up and that eventually means anaerobic conditions.
HG
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Unless you are growing native varieties (and NO, bluegrass is Eurasian, not native, and the worst offender) it is nitrogen hungry plants needing 3 to 8 lb.s of nitrogen to do well. So it is using more than it produces. NOT a good reason... (hard and fine fescues, my favorites, only need around two lb.s which we can do nicely just in the nitrogen from microbiology breaking down thatch, throw in a corn gluten feeding and you are golden)
Keep trying Dec
Keep trying Dec
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So you have 5 options as I see it than.
1 Use city water (is it chlorinated)
2 Use well water, if you don't have a well build a well
3 Use rain barrels catching rain water from your roof
4 If you go with 3 you can get a new non asphalt shingle roof
5 Put your rain barrels in the middle of the yard to collect natural rain.
1 Use city water (is it chlorinated)
2 Use well water, if you don't have a well build a well
3 Use rain barrels catching rain water from your roof
4 If you go with 3 you can get a new non asphalt shingle roof
5 Put your rain barrels in the middle of the yard to collect natural rain.
Whatever grass it is I have in my yard I don't feed it anything but water when it needs it and it does great. It's been this way for as long as I've lived (my parents have never fertilized it either), so maybe it's a native grass?The Helpful Gardener wrote:Unless you are growing native varieties (and NO, bluegrass is Eurasian, not native, and the worst offender) it is nitrogen hungry plants needing 3 to 8 lb.s of nitrogen to do well. So it is using more than it produces. NOT a good reason... (hard and fine fescues, my favorites, only need around two lb.s which we can do nicely just in the nitrogen from microbiology breaking down thatch, throw in a corn gluten feeding and you are golden)
Keep trying Dec
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I went looking for anything I could find on-line re possible contaminants in roof collected rainwater. Here it is:
https://en.allexperts.com/q/Occupational-OSHA-Environmental-1417/rainwater-collection-asphalt-roof.htm
I checked with several plant scientists, and the answer was that there should not be any problems with vegetables watered with normal run off from a normal asphalt roof. The amounts of any petroleum contaminants would be small, and plant roots are not designed to take up petroleum products.
https://www.gdrc.org/uem/water/rainwater/introduction.html
Reasonably pure rainwater can be collected from roofs constructed with galvanized corrugated iron, aluminium or asbestos cement sheets, tiles and slates,
https://www.nsf.org/consumer/rainwater_collection/index.asp?program=GreenLiv
Some materials, such as the asbestos roof materials used in older homes, should not be part of any system used to provide drinking water. In addition, products such as asphalt shingles can contribute particulate matter into the water, requiring additional filtration before the water reaches the storage tank or cistern. In addition, lead materials in any form, such as lead flashing, should not be used in a rainwater collection system.
https://rainwater.sustainablesources.com/
The main function of the roof washer is to isolate and reject the first water that has fallen on the roof after rain has begun and then direct the rest of the water to the cistern. Ten gallons of rainfall per thousand square feet of roof area is considered an acceptable amount for washing. Roof washers are commercially available and afford reliability, durability, and minimal maintenance to this function.
Roof washing is not needed for water used for irrigation purposes.
https://www.physorg.com/news88268999.html This was under the heading of rainwater fails health test:
More than half of 560 samples from private dwellings in New Zealand exceeded the minimal standards for contamination and 30 percent showed evidence of heavy faecal contamination.
But they were talking about using the roof water collected for drinking and the only contamination they were talking about was fecal contamination from bird droppings, etc. I think for purposes of growing vegetables we would not worry about that.
https://www.mamashealth.com/eco/rainwater.asp
Some roofing materials are not suitable for a rainwater collection system. If there is lead, chromium or cadmium in the roofing materials, soldering, flashing's, or paint, you shouldn't collect rainwater on top of your roof.
https://en.allexperts.com/q/Occupational-OSHA-Environmental-1417/rainwater-collection-asphalt-roof.htm
I checked with several plant scientists, and the answer was that there should not be any problems with vegetables watered with normal run off from a normal asphalt roof. The amounts of any petroleum contaminants would be small, and plant roots are not designed to take up petroleum products.
https://www.gdrc.org/uem/water/rainwater/introduction.html
Reasonably pure rainwater can be collected from roofs constructed with galvanized corrugated iron, aluminium or asbestos cement sheets, tiles and slates,
https://www.nsf.org/consumer/rainwater_collection/index.asp?program=GreenLiv
Some materials, such as the asbestos roof materials used in older homes, should not be part of any system used to provide drinking water. In addition, products such as asphalt shingles can contribute particulate matter into the water, requiring additional filtration before the water reaches the storage tank or cistern. In addition, lead materials in any form, such as lead flashing, should not be used in a rainwater collection system.
https://rainwater.sustainablesources.com/
The main function of the roof washer is to isolate and reject the first water that has fallen on the roof after rain has begun and then direct the rest of the water to the cistern. Ten gallons of rainfall per thousand square feet of roof area is considered an acceptable amount for washing. Roof washers are commercially available and afford reliability, durability, and minimal maintenance to this function.
Roof washing is not needed for water used for irrigation purposes.
https://www.physorg.com/news88268999.html This was under the heading of rainwater fails health test:
More than half of 560 samples from private dwellings in New Zealand exceeded the minimal standards for contamination and 30 percent showed evidence of heavy faecal contamination.
But they were talking about using the roof water collected for drinking and the only contamination they were talking about was fecal contamination from bird droppings, etc. I think for purposes of growing vegetables we would not worry about that.
https://www.mamashealth.com/eco/rainwater.asp
Some roofing materials are not suitable for a rainwater collection system. If there is lead, chromium or cadmium in the roofing materials, soldering, flashing's, or paint, you shouldn't collect rainwater on top of your roof.
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Well obviously, if you are going to be that purist about it you have to use distilled water all the time. Distilled water is H2O and nothing else (assuming of course that you clean and sterilize all the containers you put it in! ). But as I think maybe Applestar pointed out, that way you are not adding the trace minerals/nutrients that would be in natural water sources.
I am opposed to purism in most of it's forms. And at least for a city dweller like me living near the corner of two busy streets and not far from several interstates on property that has been used as a trash dump, it would certainly be silly to get too worried about possible micro-contamination of my rainwater! Given what's being deposited from the air and what's already in the soil, the rainwater is the VERY least of my worries!
I am opposed to purism in most of it's forms. And at least for a city dweller like me living near the corner of two busy streets and not far from several interstates on property that has been used as a trash dump, it would certainly be silly to get too worried about possible micro-contamination of my rainwater! Given what's being deposited from the air and what's already in the soil, the rainwater is the VERY least of my worries!
Thanks, RG, for backing up/debunking my claims. Sorry, al,l about posting unsubstantiated claims. I had heard the concept from a friend and, after hearing about the toxins rainwater picks up from asphalt roads and driveways, I just assumed it was true.
I guess the level of "contamination" is really nominal and the plants may not even absorb those contaminates, anyway.
I guess the level of "contamination" is really nominal and the plants may not even absorb those contaminates, anyway.
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Good to be careful, G5. I am. BUt you should check stuff out for yourself; I've gotten burned on the hearsay a bunch of times myself...
With the garbage in our rainwater from the Midwest coal plants, we Eastern types get a buch of c**p already. West coasters get a slew of Chinese contaminates that blow across the Pacific. Midwest has about the cleanest air (thanks to Cali and those other cleaner states and the Rockies).
What you gonna do? Until we get some serious law in place (with teeth) that holds world wide, you will always get somebody's garbage...
It's a small world after all...
HG
With the garbage in our rainwater from the Midwest coal plants, we Eastern types get a buch of c**p already. West coasters get a slew of Chinese contaminates that blow across the Pacific. Midwest has about the cleanest air (thanks to Cali and those other cleaner states and the Rockies).
What you gonna do? Until we get some serious law in place (with teeth) that holds world wide, you will always get somebody's garbage...
It's a small world after all...
HG
Last edited by The Helpful Gardener on Fri Jul 23, 2010 2:31 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Hey, I know this is an older thread, but I have a question. Even if the plants do not absorb the contaminates, wouldn't the contaminates still be harmful to the soil? And then still run off into our drainage systems??garden5 wrote: I guess the level of "contamination" is really nominal and the plants may not even absorb those contaminates, anyway.
I love the idea of a rain barrel. I have a huge tier in my back yard so that rain just pours down. I'm trying to figure out a way to make a "gutter" for it to direct the water into a barrel and not into my neighbor's basement. I can't put in any true drainage systems because our neighborhood requires that you get a landscape architect to design it for you. I rent...I'm not paying to do that!
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