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No rainwater for blueberries

Started by davholla, July 02, 2009, 22:17:56

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amphibian

Quote from: Digeroo on July 04, 2009, 08:42:08
Can't you drive down and get some?

I don't need any, I've got rain water, it was last year I used tap water. The plants have only shown the chlorosis this year.

QuoteWhat about the Tunbrdge Wells?

The Wells are chalybeate springs, very rich in iron and soft, I suppose they'd be excellent water for blueberries which suffer from Iron deficiency very easily.

amphibian


debster

what about cheap stores own bottled water til you can get some rain/river water etc would that be any good???? i know some supermarkets charge around 13 fot 2 litres
dont know if its any good though

OllieC

Quote from: debster on July 04, 2009, 13:11:44
what about cheap stores own bottled water til you can get some rain/river water etc would that be any good???? i know some supermarkets charge around 13 fot 2 litres
dont know if its any good though

My dad uses it for lots of his houseplants - living near Portsmouth in a flat, it's the easiest way to keep them alive.

davholla

Thank you everyone for the replies.  I managed to persuade my parents to give me some (they are very anti fruit growing in small gardens like mine, so didn't want to).

I think I will buy a water filter for future use.

The only bad thing is that one of the bushes has got shrivelled fruit - are these a right off or might they survive?

OllieC

Ha, good old parents! A normal filtering jug wouldn't change the pH... or do you mean a water softener?

davholla

Quote from: OllieC on July 06, 2009, 08:08:15
Ha, good old parents
Not really they only helped 'cos otherwise I would start using the condenser dryer again which is less environmentally friendly than the line.  If I had a normal dryer they would not have helped.

Quote from: OllieC on July 06, 2009, 08:08:15
Ha, good old parents! A normal filtering jug wouldn't change the pH... or do you mean a water softener?
I mean one of these :-
http://www.argos.co.uk/static/Product/partNumber/8422271/Trail/searchtext%3EWATER+FILTER.htm

That should remove the hardness, shouldn't it?

OllieC

Only joking about the parents! I don't think that jug will alter the hardness, I think activated charcoal will remove chlorine and possibly nitrates, but that's about it...

davholla

Quote from: OllieC on July 06, 2009, 13:03:26
Only joking about the parents! I don't think that jug will alter the hardness, I think activated charcoal will remove chlorine and possibly nitrates, but that's about it...
I think it will according to :-
http://www.hardwater.org/water_treatment.html

OllieC

Quote from: davholla on July 06, 2009, 13:27:25
Quote from: OllieC on July 06, 2009, 13:03:26
Only joking about the parents! I don't think that jug will alter the hardness, I think activated charcoal will remove chlorine and possibly nitrates, but that's about it...
I think it will according to :-
http://www.hardwater.org/water_treatment.html

Can't open it over here... Hmm, where's baccy man, he always knows these things... My logic is that I have activated charcoal in my fish tank & it doesn't alter the pH, just mops up the crud... delighted to be corrected though!

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