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★Lily asked in Home & GardenGarden & Landscape · 1 decade ago

Using grey water (from the washing machine) on veggies?

Have you tried watering your plants growing grey water on your vegetable garden and what was the results? Flavour?

8 Answers

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  • bugsie
    Lv 7
    1 decade ago
    Favorite Answer

    The results are these,

    first they grow better because the soap in the water acts as a pesticide and washes away and kills insects on contact.

    Then the soapy water makes the earth more porous, so the water and fertilizer can get into the earth more efficiently.

    Flavor depends on the micro-nutrients in your own soil.

    Just like grapes. If they are grown in France, they taste one way, if the same graped are grown in California, they take on a different taste. That is the soil, more than the water content!

    Works for everything.

    My mothers carrots taste as though she grew them in a SUGAR BOWL. mine, well they just taste like carrots!

  • 1 decade ago

    I am just wondering how you plan on getting the grey water out of the washing machine to put on your plants. Am I missing something here? Are you running your washing machine hose out into the garden? I think you should re-think the whole thing. It may be good for your garden or it may not be good for your garden but there is a reason why we dont drain out into the environment. It isnt good for everything....

    Source(s): Myself: Professional Gardner and Green environmentalist.
  • 1 decade ago

    indeed, pixiotr is right about not letting them touch the ground.

    one more- i really suggest u do it with an ecological wash powder or these indian nuts, because the regular wash powder is poisonous, and furthermore - i don't think the plants will survive it. if you still use the regular powder for any reason, i suggest you get the gray water into a shallow pond with water plants, then take the water from the pond to water the garden. i'm sure you can plan something to make it easy.

    the significance of getting the gray water through the water-plants, is that these plants can filter the soap out of the water, and clean them.

    happy gardening!

  • Anonymous
    5 years ago

    you do no longer say no remember if this is a bathing room or kitchen sink- "washing up" isn't possibly an american term. The kitchen sink gets a selection of of food debris, and grease could be a real difficulty. Greywater is often against development codes, considering the fact which you need to conceivably wash feces down the drain; you will could verify you do no longer try this. you somewhat could have some type of filter out for a kitchen sink. you may make a organic and organic filter out your self easily. you % a grease catch too- grease will coat the soil and forestall oxygen from accomplishing plant roots. I examine the aspects checklist, and it includes slightly sodium. In a greenhouse, even a low concentration ought to construct up in container flora. we don't understand precisely how plenty is in there, it may in all probability no longer be a concern if it have been unfold exterior. Oasis layout is a great source of awareness on greywater- their internet site has some unfastened information, they sell books with greater.

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  • Anonymous
    1 decade ago

    although it is against health department regulations in most states to use grey water on food plants consumed by humans, I have used wash water on my garden for years with no adverse affects. it does not affect the taste, although it does leave a residue on the vegges if used on runner plants such as vine growing squash, so I keep my plants trimmed up off the ground and am selective on which plants I use grey water on.

  • 1 decade ago

    I dont believe grey water should be on anything edible.

  • 1 decade ago

    saved water

  • kelli.
    Lv 5
    1 decade ago

    first of all if you water is the color gray that can't be good

    second of all have a nice day

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