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Hi ,I was looking for a under-sink reverse osmosis filter to get rid of fluoride and other chemicals.I live in a flat(apartment) so I cant buy a huge tank, thanks in advance.
1 week ago we set up our first 15.5 gallon aquarium. We used our tap water which initially read as slightly below neutral pH (We use a water-softening system in our house.) I used Cycle and two days later added seven Zebra Danios and one Julii Corydora. We are planning on waiting the full six week set-up cycle before adding anything further. Yesterday I tested my pH to find it has raised an astonishing amount to just above 8 pH!. I have discovered that gravel containing limestone can raise pH, and it’s possible that my gravel does contain limestone, but not certain. I have also read that I can lower my pH using reverse osmosis water (We have this at home as well) during weekly water changes. I was wondering if anyone has experience with this, and should I just change out my gravel completely starting over and then make sure I’m using limestone-free gravel? Or will weekly water changes using the RO water help lower and maintain a more neutral pH? OR – is it simply because my initial new set up cycle hasn’t completed??? Thanks in advance for any help Thanks for your input. I’m well aware of the pH I need for the fish I want, which is why I asked what my plan of action should be. Should I completely change out my gravel to lower my pH or use reverse osmosis water during changes? Is the water the pet stores provide RO water? If so, I can use my own. Also, I don’t want to use chemicals to alter the pH otherwise I’ll be fighting a constant natural chemistry battle. The driftwood might be an option, but would completely changing the gravel be better?
I live in Southern California (west LA) and I want to start a little summer veggie garden. I was thinking of growing corn, tomatoes, broccoli, peppers, bok choy, and ong choy (azn veggies.) This is my first time growing a veggie garden. Do you suggest starting from seeds or clones/transplants? If clones/transplants are recommended; where is a good supplier in the LA area? Do I need to pH the water and add nutes to the soil? Should I use RO (reverse osmosis water) or tap water? Tap water already has a PPM of 650 in my area so that alone has plenty of minerals, chemicals, prescriptions (haha) to keep the plant healthy, yes?
Any tips would help cause I’m obviously a noob.
Thanks! I plan on feeding just myself and my hubby so only two people. I have a huge plot of land (soil) next to our condo that is totally available (like 10X10) but I doubt I’ll use all that space.
I used sodium free spring water for my water change. I tested it first and it reads almost perfect except for it being on the hard water side. I can’t use our water even though we have a reverse osmosis system because it reads high acidity. We have well water but our whole area for some reason is acidic. I have tried using the chemicals to get our fresh water tank to 7.0 but even though I thought I was buying the best brands the never seem to work. Since I have been using bottled water our fish don’t seem to be dying anymore. Am I doing the right thing? I just tested the water and it is reading just fine. Tanks again I just looked bottled water up in the book "Freshwater fish for dummies" and it highly recommends bottle water. It said not to use the expensive kind because if you do it will be the wrong kind. Use spring water but test it first with a test kit to make sure it is ok. I tested 3 and Walmart spring won. Did I help anyone out?
Hi, im a student engineer currently trying to figure out if there are any techniques of adding chemicals to a waste water plant which contain lots of salts produced from concrete manufaction….. the water is currently to salty to discharge to the stormwater system and needs to be adjusted before it can be discharged, are [...]
reverse osmosis water purifing companies say no chemicals are added. if so why the water received from the machine is different taste? Whether pure water has any taste? When water hardness results kidney stone what is alternative to reverse osmosis filtration?
They say that reverse osmosis is the purest water you can drink. It is so pure that it can cause problems because it draws the minerals from your body in order to establish a ph balance. Is there then mineral drops you can add to the water in order for it to not have to [...]
i have a frog, and i use water with chemicals to remove the chlorine, but i also have a fish and instead of chemicals i use the RO water, and a plant. its really healthy for him and he loves it. can i use that RO water to put the shallow water in my pacman [...]
Recentley the water company has been playing with our sources of city water. The pipes that feed my home are most definetley old because it is not uncommon to recieve shards of some kind of stone in our tap and toilets.–which i don’t trust for myself, never mind the fish. We purchase drinking water from [...]