Why you Should be Using Filtered Water on your Plants and Garden

Why you Should be Using Filtered Water on your Plants and Garden

By Dan DeBaun

Tap water can contain a wide range of chemicals and contaminants that can hamper plant growth and their ability to thrive. There are several ways to remove these contaminants to make it safe for plants, including letting it stand for a while, boiling the water, or filtering it before watering your plants. The simplest and most effective method of removing unwanted contaminants from water is to filter it with a good quality water filter before watering your garden.

Why Removing Chlorine is Good for Plants

Tap water is typically treated with chlorine to kill pathogenic bacteria. The problem with chlorine is that it doesn't discriminate and will also kill beneficial bacteria and microorganisms that live in soil. At high levels, chlorine can also damage plant roots.

Chloride toxicity symptoms in plants including curling on the leaf edges, scorched edges, smaller leaves, reduction in plant growth, and excessive leaf loss, and can eventually result in the death of the plant.

You can de-chlorinate tap water by letting it stand uncovered outdoors for at least 24 hours to allow the chlorine to evaporate. A quicker method is to use a home water filter to remove the chlorine, which will ensure it will not damage plants or harm beneficial organisms in your garden soil.

using filtered water for plants

Reduce the Hardness of Water Can Also Be Good for Plants

Hard water contains traces of limestone deposits that can cause high levels of dissolved calcium and magnesium, which can be harmful to plants at high levels. Using water softeners to reduce the hardness of tap water is not a good option when watering plants, as water softeners contain sodium carbonate, which will increase sodium levels, which is not good for plants.

Maintaining a Healthy PH for Better Plant Growth

Most plants, with the exception of species such as azaleas, blueberries and other types of berries, thrive at a pH of between 5.5 to 7.0. Tap water very often has a high pH, which can increase when calcium is present in water. This can limit nutrient uptake, and over an extended period of time can cause pH levels in the soil to increase too.

Home water filters, such as the Berkey, offer an all-round solution for quickly removing contaminants that can harm plants from tap water. Unlike distilled water or reverse osmosis systems, which also remove natural minerals that are essential to plant growth, the Black Berkey elements let the good minerals pass through with the water. As a result, healthy minerals that are essential for plant growth are still available to the plant and won't lead to an imbalance in the soil. Plants also require less fertilizers as natural minerals present in the water help nourish the plant and soil.

A Berkey water filter system is a great all-round investment for your home. Besides keeping your plants healthy, a Berkey water filter can filter water from from any source to ensure you and your family, and even your pets, have access to a supply of clean, healthy, contaminant-free drinking water in any situation.

Dan DeBaun

Dan DeBaun

Dan DeBaun is the owner and operator of Big Berkey Water Filters. Prior to Berkey, Dan was an asset manager for a major telecommunications company. He graduated from Rutgers with an undergraduate degree in industrial engineering, followed by an MBA in finance from Rutgers as well. Dan enjoys biohacking, exercising, meditation, beach life, and spending time with family and friends.

~ The Owner of Big Berkey Water Filters

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