jungojango
New Member
As newbie, theese are mind opening concepts. Now I'm a bit more far from the total ignorance
For fucks sake, how do you not already know the answer?!? Yes, it's fucking possible. Jeebus, the fucking municipal water treatment plant does it around the clock. Now if you're so fucking rich and smart go build a water treatment plant.Wow, so much hate over someone trying to do the right thing... Name calling isn't wise and gives off no appearance of authority. Pack up and get out if you're going to be negative please. I've no time for it.
So basically what I'm hearing is: You can't cause you're not smart or rich.
Totally disregarding the fact that this would be in theory in the first place and then move to practical engineering.
I'll be waiting for cooler heads to chime in. Though reusing the hydroponics water waste on a dirt based grow wouldn't be a horrible idea since it's all going to the ocean anyway. My question stands. Is it possible to retreat a hydroponics water waste and further refine the results into something useful or safe?
It's been a couple years there bud...For fucks sake, how do you not already know the answer?!? Yes, it's fucking possible. Jeebus, the fucking municipal water treatment plant does it around the clock. Now if you're so fucking rich and smart go build a water treatment plant.
You asked about this shit and experienced people are telling you its a cost probative endeavor. If you don't like the answers don't ask the fucking questions. Or, build a wfucking water treatment facility to "show us". Either way no one gives a single fuck. Just stop with the bullshiting brilliance act, please.
Been there lol.Got caught up in the moment. I'd make up an excuse, but it'd prolly be lame, and I'd just look sillier
This is only true if you're on a municipal water supply. Plenty of people on this site alone are not, so pouring waste down the drain is the same as pouring waste outside.The easiest way to do this is to simply pour it down any drain in your house, this sends the water to water treatment facilities that; at the cost of our tax dollars, filters all of the chemicals out. This, while wasting the water as a resource itself, is the easiest way to ensure your chemical waste isn't going into the environment.
Well, that's not right..I am just popping in from reading your initial post; unfortunetly yes, it does create significantly more waste than growing in soil. Growing in soil, about the worst thing for the environment is either trashing the outdoor's around it with litter and such, or chemical fertizilers being applied near a running stream or well. With that being said....there are ways to recycle the large amounts of left over water from past resevoir changes in, per say, DWC. The easiest way to do this is to simply pour it down any drain in your house, this sends the water to water treatment facilities that; at the cost of our tax dollars, filters all of the chemicals out. This, while wasting the water as a resource itself, is the easiest way to ensure your chemical waste isn't going into the environment. If you're like me, and have an outdoor garden of any kind, flowers especially, you can store your old water and use it to fertilize your garden as phosporous tends to be left over in the largest amounts and blooming plants/fruits/veggies will eat the leftover chems in your water. If you do like me and go about 30 days between rez changes, there really is not a massive amount of leftover water like there is at rez changes every week...and it causes me no problems running standalone DWC.
Hope I could help some....
Happy Growing; I hope you can figure out what works best for you!
Oh, my apologies! Did not mean to give bad info there!This is only true if you're on a municipal water supply. Plenty of people on this site alone are not, so pouring waste down the drain is the same as pouring waste outside.
You really shouldn't rerun waste water, its already been 'thrown out' by the RO system as unusable.Wow, so much hate over someone trying to do the right thing... Name calling isn't wise and gives off no appearance of authority. Pack up and get out if you're going to be negative please. I've no time for it.
So basically what I'm hearing is: You can't cause you're not smart or rich.
Totally disregarding the fact that this would be in theory in the first place and then move to practical engineering.
I'll be waiting for cooler heads to chime in. Though reusing the hydroponics water waste on a dirt based grow wouldn't be a horrible idea since it's all going to the ocean anyway. My question stands. Is it possible to retreat a hydroponics water waste and further refine the results into something useful or safe?
Our plants eat 99% of what we put in, the rest is happily devoured by my outside garden. Nothing wasted whatsoeverWell, that's not right..
I grow in hydroponics; I also grow in soil; both of these methods are done in an aeroponic method, in the same system. My hydro and soil I have "zero" waste. Nothing in my system goes to waste, ever. Cannabis garden's are not a cookie cutter, "one size fits all", as no two gardens are alike.