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The main reasons for aging the hummonia before using it to cycle up a system is because you can't really measure how much you have added if you add it fresh. As in you won't get an ammonia reading after peeing in the tank even though you may have added plenty, this leads to people tending to over dose when using fresh urine or urea.
Also, aging the urine will kill certain very common pathogens (like e. coli that is on and in pretty much everyone, bottling and aging the urine till the pH reaches 9 seems to be a very easy way to kill the e. coli)
Yes urine contains other nutrients including phosphorus, potassium and micro nutrients. I'm not sure what else bagged urea contains but probably not much phosphorus or potassium though I'm sure there are some other trace element impurities though I'm not sure how desirable some of them would be in aquaponics if used heavily. At least with the pee, you know you are not adding anything that you were not willing to put into your body in the first place.
I agree with what you have said. My system is about 700 gallons total with about 20 cu ft of gravel. I have rarely been able to over dose this system with all the pee I produce in a day, I did water tests on this system just like I do on my aquaponic system, and keeping it in range was never a problem. If Ammonia crept up I would not add urine that day and it returns to zero Ammonia by the next day.
The Urea I bought looks very pure. Probably not much in the way of trace minerals left in it.
Just for the record I am using Urea only because I can't produce enough urine to conduct an experiment to find out how much Nitrate the tomatoes, and basil can handle. Does anyone already know what level of Nitrate can burn the plants?
I started doing peeponics because it seems natural, and I suspect the urine contains trace elements. Aging urine is of course the right way to go, but it's bothersome, and I'm healthy. I doubt I will spread pathogens.
TCLynx said:
The main reasons for aging the hummonia before using it to cycle up a system is because you can't really measure how much you have added if you add it fresh. As in you won't get an ammonia reading after peeing in the tank even though you may have added plenty, this leads to people tending to over dose when using fresh urine or urea.
Also, aging the urine will kill certain very common pathogens (like e. coli that is on and in pretty much everyone, bottling and aging the urine till the pH reaches 9 seems to be a very easy way to kill the e. coli)
Yes urine contains other nutrients including phosphorus, potassium and micro nutrients. I'm not sure what else bagged urea contains but probably not much phosphorus or potassium though I'm sure there are some other trace element impurities though I'm not sure how desirable some of them would be in aquaponics if used heavily. At least with the pee, you know you are not adding anything that you were not willing to put into your body in the first place.
I've had nitrates off the scale on the freshwater master test kit and never had fertilizer "burn" on the plants. I think the problem with fertilizer burn in garden or hydroponics is more to do with the salts than the actual nitrogen content. That said, pure ammonia or huge amounts of something that turns into ammonia put into a system that doesn't have a cycled up bio-filter might cause harm to the plants due to ammonia burn (I've only really heard of signs of this when people keep dosing and dosing in a brand new system with fresh urine or urea because they don't get an ammonia reading right away and several days later the ammonia starts rising and rising as the urea starts converting and by then it is horribly overdosed and the ammonia levels wind up off the chart and often stall or severely slow the initial cycle up.)
Thanks to both TC and Jon, I will discontinue the experiment. I actually bought the Urea to burn out a patch of Bamboo
My AP tomatoes taste better than my in ground tomatoes. They taste like they have a little salt on them. Early in the season I gave them a big helping of Epsom Salts. I don't know, but that might have something to do with it.
Yes good point on the disinfection. Thought I read human urine was effectively sterile however, at least fresh out of the bladder. It breeds bacteria like crazy after that though so I guess it doesn't matter how it is brought into the outside world.
Assuming everything on wikipedia is true, looks like there is quite a bit of industrial urea manufacturing on the order of 100M tons a year. It is also the primary ingredient of Miracle Grow products so even if it was derived from urine, it is likely highly refined for control reasons.
Just a guess when/if animal effluent is treated/reprocessed it is done on a whole as a slurry. Since urea doesn't seem to be that stable on it's own in solution they are likely targeting the N content as ammonia.
My cherry tomatoes are very sweet.
My in ground Early Girls began to ripen weeks before the PeePonic Early Girls even though the in ground do not get afternoon sun. They were planted in a flower garden which I added worm compost to last year, so the soil was not optima, but pretty good, and they get a lot of water in that flower bed.
By the way, as you suggested, I've come to enjoy the bitter taste of Water Cress
Hey guys, I have to admit I have not the time to read this entire thread in detail right now, but skimming through it seems like some good points are raised (as could only be expected considering the "usual suspects" present :).
Bob, I'd only like to add that you think about biuret...and hope that the bag you purchase indicates that it is at least "low biuret" urea.
ALL chemically synthesized urea contains either more or a lesser amount of biuret. It is an impurity inherent to the process. (Chemically synthesized urea, the kind you buy in a bag from a store as fertilizer) It will stunt or harm crops (the biuret). Say, that is the reason only "low biuret urea" should ever be foliar fed, and never the 'regular' stuff, as it can (and often seems to) be harmful to plant health/growth once it accumulates beyond a certain point (as it would when foliar feeding).. How or if this plays out in AP is anyone's guess. Just keep that (the possible effects of biuret in your system) in mind during your experiment. I'm betting the biuret affects your plants before some excess of nitrates ever will.
Gotta go...
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