I have been using melted snow to water my bitches...snow contains nitrogen so its like free nutes...anyone else trying this or am I the only one...I suggest you try it... :thumbsup:
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I have been using melted snow to water my bitches...snow contains nitrogen so its like free nutes...anyone else trying this or am I the only one...I suggest you try it... :thumbsup:
I'm pretty sure I can say with confidence that yes, you are the only one :)
yea... and i would like to see some documentation showing that snow contains nitrogen
the way i see it, it would be no different than watering with collected rainwater, which alot of people do, but i find it seriously hard to believe that snow or rainwater contain any significant amount of N
i could be wrong though... so show me somethin proving it :D
hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha.............. ..........................................hahahaha hahahahahhaha
Scroll down to the bottom of the link...its the last Q/AQuote:
Originally Posted by mightymarijuanabuds
http://ggweather.com/archive/weacornermar09.htm
Actually you are right about the rain water...I had only heard about this in snow...
I will continue my practices...I am not affraid of pollution...much
interesting
ill still stick with fox farms... $15 for a big bottle of ferts that last years for my little garden.. besdies ya need different ferts for flowering anyway :)
Why take the risk of possibly exposing my plants to something that would harm them. And considering the fact that the ph level of most rain water is very acidic. I would rather feed them controlled water that is well treated.
What a waist of time.
I'm still skeptical. . . when it comes to my plants i dont know if i am going to trust something from the San Jose Mercury News.
I think, though, that even if nitrogen is "trapped" in snow as they say, when the snow melts it most likely evaporates and is released as a gas which doesnt help your plants. The only way for the nitrogen to have the same effect as fertilizer would be if it was somehow chemically bound with something in the snow... and if that were the case snow would be more than just frozen H2O (something like NH2O, and it certainly isnt).
So while its a possibility that there MAY be trace amounts of nitrogen "trapped" in snow, it probably is simply released when the snow melt and serves no benefit to the plant at all. But hey if you wanna risk your plants health by experimenting, go ahead.
-JPG
Wow I cannot beleive we are still talking about this. SNOW IS RAIN, RAIN IS WATER. The nutrient content isn't going to change with temperature... Sorry :)