Indoor adding food coloring for cool color

This is interesting, so how do I get cold water......all the water I use is continuously bubbled in 90 liter tanks and thus at least at ambient temperature......hmmmm, guess dumping the full load of the fridge ice maker bin might do it.......would also result in more oxygen in the water.

Stepside, I guees you know this, but well water usually has no oxygen in it and often high CO2 levels.....just saying

http://www.nfkc.info/Safely adding water.htm

Well Water

For those of you who have a well with potable drinking water, you have it easier. The only real problems with well water is that is usually contains very little or no oxygen, and that the temperature may be drastically different from your pond water, especially in our hot Florida summers. This water should also be sprayed when added to the pond.

http://www.biblicalagrarianism.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=852

Filling Ponds with Well Water Can Kill Fish
Contributed by ElaineK on Friday, August 25 @ 05:20:20 CDT

OVERTON – Landowners seeking to replenish their drought-depleted farm ponds with well water could kill their fish if they're not careful, said an expert with Texas Cooperative Extension.

"We can kill fish with well water that's perfectly good to drink," said Dr. Billy Higginbotham, Extension fisheries and wildlife specialist.



Because of the ongoing drought, water levels of many of Texas' estimated 1 million farm ponds are dropping.

With dropping water levels, the surface area of a pond is also likely to shrink, Higginbotham said. And when the surface area – the area of water exposed to the air – shrinks, then the pond water's ability to absorb oxygen is reduced as well.

Even during a normal summer, the most likely cause of fish death is oxygen depletion, Higginbotham said. The hot, windless days often experienced in summer reduce the ability of ponds to absorb and hold oxygen. Also, cloudy days in summer can slow down photosynthesis of aquatic plants, which release oxygen, compounding the problem.

"Oxygen depletion problems account for about 85 percent of all fish die-offs in Texas farm ponds," he said.

But with reduced surface areas, the risk is increased, Higgenbotham said. Many pond owners know this, and have been calling asking about adding water from their wells.

But though the pond water may be muddy and green, while the well water is clear and clean, it's still not a good idea to rush in, he said.

"There are two issues -- quality and quantity of the well water -- that must be taken into consideration," he said.

The most critical is quality. By "quality," Higginbotham meant a difference in quality between the pond and well water.

"Either a too large of a change in temperature or pH can shock the fish and result in fish death," he said.

With pH, a change of more than one unit, either up or down, can endanger fish, if occurring in a short period of time. With temperature, a quick change of 10 degrees or more, also either up or down, can put the fish at risk, he said.

Which leads to the second consideration: quantity, Higginbotham said.

"If we've got a garden hose running into a pond, then the change in (water) quality is going to be small over a long period of time, particularly in a larger pond," he said. "The fish will have time to adapt.

"But with a 6-inch line pumping at fire hose quantities into a fairly small pond, the change in quality will happen much more quickly. It's not just the change; it's the rate of change."

Even if the pH is similar, a wholesale temperature change can also result in fish death, Higginbotham said.

Such a wholesale change can happen naturally during the summer if a period of high temperatures is followed by a heavy rain, he said. This is because ponds can become stratified. The top stratum of water will be warmer because warm water, like warm air, rises. The lower strata, including the bottom stratum, remains cooler. Moreover, dead organic matter will build up on at the lowest levels. Deprived of oxygenated water, this organic matter will remain in a kind of stasis, not decaying, he said.

But a cool rain or strong wind from a summer thunderstorm can cause the pond to "turn over" as the now-cooled top layer sinks and mixes with the warmer lower layer. This causes the dead organic matter to be brought to the surface, he said.

With the dead organic matter now exposed to oxygenated water, a natural decay process can proceed at a vigorous rate, and so reduce oxygen levels that results in fish kills.

Pumping large amounts of cool water into the surface of a stratified pond can duplicate the process of "pond turnover," he said.

But even if pH and temperature of the pond water and well water are similar, it's still possible to deplete the level of oxygen if the landowner isn't careful, Higginbotham said.

This is because well water has no appreciable absorbed oxygen whatsoever, he said, and it may have a high level of carbon dioxide.

To remedy this, Higginbotham advised "breaking up the well water" before letting it enter the pond. Breaking up the water – agitating it and exposing more of its surface to the air – can be done by various methods.

The simplest is just to let the pond water run over some balled-up hardware cloth on its way to the pond's surface. More complicated methods, he said, involve dropping the water from a series of boxes arranged in stair-step fashion.

"Anything that serves to aerate the water before it enters the pond should work," he said.

A small flow of water is easier to break up than a large one, he noted.

Writer: Robert Burns, 903-834-6191,rd-burns@tamu.edu
Contact: Dr. Billy Higginbotham, 903-834-6191,b-higginbotham@tamu.edu
http://agnews.tamu.edu/dailynews/stories/WFSC/Aug1106a.htm

 
If you water with colored water you will not see any color change. How they do it is just like you learned in school. You cut the flower and stick the stem in your colored water and in a day or so your bud will change to that color just not a vibrant. Here's the problem it affects the taste especially since your are not flushing it out. Food dye tastes like shit and harsh even the vegetable based organic food coloring that is not bitter still has a bad taste just not as much when dealing with food that can mask the flavor.

So yes it can be done, but you will cough your ass off ,and have a sore throat all for color. This I learned and experienced first hand by a buddy a few years ago. It was some of the harshest smoke I ever had. he made tye dye bud by splitting the stem 3 ways and putting each part in a different color his customers bought It up.....At first he ended up tossing the rest there was no repeat business.
 
Corgy, as a matter of fact I did not know that. That's kinda weird. No oxygen?? As it passes through the well pump and is churned it doesn't take up any?? I'm gonna have to read up on this some more. Thanks man.
 
When I add water to my pond it comes through a venturi pump now. I learned it the hard way.
 
When I add water to my pond it comes through a venturi pump now. I learned it the hard way.

I hope the hard way was not any Dainichi, Sakai, Momotaro or Matsunosuke et al GoSanke's floating around.........
Money.gif
........been there, seen that!
 
I started watering my plants with ice water a few days ago. The smells have exploded but I can't tell whether it's doing anything to colors or not

It's supposed to bring out the colors if you've got the right kind of genetics.

Interesting....one wonders if that explosion of smell is tied to increased chemical production and therefore more potent bud? I'll have to consider storing a jug of RO water in the fridge, then.

If you water with colored water you will not see any color change. How they do it is just like you learned in school. You cut the flower and stick the stem in your colored water and in a day or so your bud will change to that color just not a vibrant. Here's the problem it affects the taste especially since your are not flushing it out. Food dye tastes like shit and harsh even the vegetable based organic food coloring that is not bitter still has a bad taste just not as much when dealing with food that can mask the flavor.

So yes it can be done, but you will cough your ass off ,and have a sore throat all for color. This I learned and experienced first hand by a buddy a few years ago. It was some of the harshest smoke I ever had. he made tye dye bud by splitting the stem 3 ways and putting each part in a different color his customers bought It up.....At first he ended up tossing the rest there was no repeat business.

Well, that's a funny story! I'd heard of similar methods to make tie-dye roses for valentine's day and the like, hadn't considered it might work on bud. They recommend you use white roses or flowers so the colors are more prominent, AND use a shit-ton of food coloring for it to be vibrant enough to be worth the trouble.

If your friend used enough food coloring to get the bud to even show those colors through its natural green, it's no wonder it made people cough that badly.
 
I hope the hard way was not any Dainichi, Sakai, Momotaro or Matsunosuke et al GoSanke's floating around.........View attachment 477461 ........been there, seen that!

Hey are you talking about Chef Sakai and Chef Morimoto from the old Iron Chef tv show, or are these types of koi fish, or am I just too medicated to understand what this is about?

Food coloring? :nono:
 
Hey are you talking about Chef Sakai and Chef Morimoto from the old Iron Chef tv show, or are these types of koi fish, or am I just too medicated to understand what this is about?

Food coloring? :nono:

Ahh, the mentioned chef's is in fact the creme de la creme of Japanese koi breeders, with a single fish routinely selling for 2-3000 USD and the top quality carpies going for well beyond 100.000 USD a fish...... Gosanke is a Japanese term for the 3 'royal' koi types, Kohaku, Showa and Sanke. Only a koi of these 3 types can win Grand Champion at the top Japanese koi shows(and European/US), hence the astronomical prices, and the winner is almost always "made" (bred) by one of the mentioned "chefs"...... Lol....

Have a look here http://www.sakai-ff.com/index_e.html

When you have a koi pond with half a million $ or more of fish swimming in it, it is wise to think twice before using well water for water exchanges.......
thclever02.gif


Well water may be fine for drinking, but it doesn't follow that it is ideal for irrigation and vessels of water with fish and such in them.....!
 
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