Those on PD should be able to do it also. Instead of dumping it down the toilet, dump it into a bucket and spread it around outside on anything that grows. Its great way to recycle.
So, is peeing on fruit trees okay?
........ That is urea or almost pure nitrogen coming off. So you are normally dumping nitrogen down the drain or tiolet. So use it for your garden. Its better than manure as you dont need a cow. If you put it in the ground all winter and spring I bet you will have a GREAT GARDEN.
Quote from: obsidianom on September 13, 2013, 08:02:25 AM........ That is urea or almost pure nitrogen coming off. So you are normally dumping nitrogen down the drain or tiolet. So use it for your garden. Its better than manure as you dont need a cow. If you put it in the ground all winter and spring I bet you will have a GREAT GARDEN.My apologies for being contrary, but please don't.Extra nitrogen is not a substitute for manure. Used sparingly during the growth/fruiting stage it can enhance growth of almost any plant. Beyond that, it may cause visible damage to many types of garden plants, (plasmolysis is one effect,) and over application may be highly counter productive. Soil fertility can suffer. The environment also suffers, - much of this excess ends up in waterways, promoting algael blooms and other long term problems.I would caution anyone who wants to make the best use of the nitrogen we produce from dialysis to do some research before doing so, particularly if you live in a rural environment. Contamination of groundwater used for human consumption can be a huge problem, with negative effects on the health of babies and the elderly.The following is one of many articles that I think are worth readinghttp://homeguides.sfgate.com/negative-effects-nitrogenrich-fertilizer-environment-72041.htmlHenry P
Quote from: obsidianom on September 13, 2013, 10:16:59 AMThere is one flaw in your argument , especially for rural areas. When we dump the same dialysate into the drain it STILL ENDS UP In THE GROUND. It goes into the septic tank and flows into the leach bed out into my back yard. So either way it ends up iun the same place. The only difference is that it goes first to the tree roots then into the ground. Its all in the same general area anyway. If I were in an area with city water and sewage that would be different. I live out in the woods as do many people in rural towns . Anybody with a septic system is still dumping into the ground ultimatly. Dont forget this is not extra fertilizer brought in commercially but the same stuff that has to go down the drain or toilet anyway. WE are stuck with it one way or another, so i just recycle it for use before it goes into the ground. With trees it has worked wonders. I am not an expert on smaller growth but have been growing fruit for 20 years . I cleared my own land and planted these trees . They are my "babies" . I saw a huge improvement this year with the dialysate. The foliage is thicker and the fruit is twice or more what I usually grow. I think your point on commercial fertilizer is valid. I lived in Iowa 5 years and saw what you are talking about on a large scale.Only one flaw? I was raised in and lived in a rural environment. (Large scale grain and sheep farming.) We have occupied those holdings for a hundred years. (It's only in the last 12 years or so that I have lived in a city.)We didn't even have septic systems on the farms until the 50's and they underwent several iterations until we settled on evaporative type leach drains because of the high clay content of much of our soils.One thing that was always a common feature of all of our waste disposal systems was that the effluent was not able to enter the watersheds, or the recharge areas of underground water. We were't trying to be environmentally responsible in those days, it was plain common sense and good hygiene.With all due respect, a septic system, (or any effluent disposal system,) that doesn't meet these conditions is improperly constructed.These days, a licence will not be granted to construct a septic system unless those conditions are met. I believe it will not be long before devices such as Nitrex filters for the removal of nitrogen from septic systems become mandatory. It is that big a problem.For all that, we applied increasing amounts of nitrogen to tens of thousands of acres of grain crops in an effort to increase yields, without any idea we might have been contributing to environmental degradation, not to mention the cost of the amount of nitrogen that was wasted. We, along with our peers, contributed to significant environmental damage to waterways.These days we analyse our plants and soils and determine optimum amounts of application in line with expected rainfall. Even then, we can sometimes get it wrong when mother nature doesn't co-operate. But we are trying.Henry P
There is one flaw in your argument , especially for rural areas. When we dump the same dialysate into the drain it STILL ENDS UP In THE GROUND. It goes into the septic tank and flows into the leach bed out into my back yard. So either way it ends up iun the same place. The only difference is that it goes first to the tree roots then into the ground. Its all in the same general area anyway. If I were in an area with city water and sewage that would be different. I live out in the woods as do many people in rural towns . Anybody with a septic system is still dumping into the ground ultimatly. Dont forget this is not extra fertilizer brought in commercially but the same stuff that has to go down the drain or toilet anyway. WE are stuck with it one way or another, so i just recycle it for use before it goes into the ground. With trees it has worked wonders. I am not an expert on smaller growth but have been growing fruit for 20 years . I cleared my own land and planted these trees . They are my "babies" . I saw a huge improvement this year with the dialysate. The foliage is thicker and the fruit is twice or more what I usually grow. I think your point on commercial fertilizer is valid. I lived in Iowa 5 years and saw what you are talking about on a large scale.
What about using it on grass? Will I have a greener lawn?