h a l f b a k e r yTastes richer, less filling.
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Baked... google for "water treatment methods" and add your toxin of choice. F'rinstance marshes are often used not only to filter human waste but to remove heavy metals. |
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hmmm handy when u have a marsh. so why not a marsh in a box...culture + green mass and some reliable filters |
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Basically because anything you put in a box has a limited shelf life. Even if preserve the chlorophyl in your box, the act of binding to a given toxin will render it powerless against further toxins, and there is no living thing cycling it back to usefulness. Furthermore, leaves come pre-mixed with various fungi and bacteria that will likely prove harmful in and of themselves if allowed to propagate in a water-filled box. |
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This is a good suggestion at heart, but ideally you want to find a way to keep the plant matter live while you pump the gunk through it. |
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I doubt there's anything magical about
chlorophyll. Organic matter in general
tends to bind a wide range of small
molecules and metals; you'd probably be
better off filtering through peat. |
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//use well dried leaves to filter toxins from water// In England, we call this a nice cup of tea. |
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chlorophyll was just mentioned as it is has good chelation properties... |
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the idea would be to have a testing system in place..could prob simplify it down to a test kit not unlike many water tests..something that looks like litmus (sp?) paper. Have say 5 paper tests to do, get a camera thats calibrated to measure the results of the paper tests. A simple program could calculate where your peat can is going well, not so well etc. Then with a reference the owner can appropriately balance it with less of one waste...more of one bacteria... |
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Also, I think that as long as the bacteria are producing (which can be measured by the rate of heat generation) then one has a good indicator of the stage in the life cycle the peat is at. |
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