Best In-Line Water Hose Filter for your Organic Garden
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- Опубликовано: 2 окт 2024
- John from www.growingyour... will show how easily you can install an in-line water filter that allows you to remove chlorine and other contaminants from city water. In this episode you will learn about two different water filters that can be easily used for a drip irrigation system or to water your organic garden with your water hose. After watching this episode you will learn why John believes it is important to filter the tap water and how this may increase your plant growth. Of these two in-line water filters, you will learn which John prefers and why. Finally, John will share with you how you can SAVE 40% off the normal price of this recommended in-line garden hose filter for GYG viewers only.
Get the special savings by going to the link below:
www.boogiebrew....
I took notice of the water from the hose and rain water years ago. Told my hubby, plants seem to do lots better when it rains on them. Took me a bit to realize the hose water with clorine in it was hendering the growth. This past year is when I realized the treated water was killing off the soil microbs. Thanks or sharing John. Have a goodun
We got our Boogie brew filter the other day.Really nice people and fast delivery. Thanks for the suggestion.
Never too late to start gardening, just ordered a boogie blue filter!🌿💚
Just got my first Boogie Blue Plus filter! Thanks for the informative video.
Thanks for doing all the work on finding things we need to grow great!!! Love it
It DEFINITELY makes a BIG difference fo filter your water
Boogie Brew advertises it as removing chloramine. I personally am skeptical on its ability to remove chloramine from personal research I have done and If I had chloramine in my water I would get a different filter.
These little filters cannot do much with that little carbon and to remove chloramines takes special catalytic activated carbon. If it has KDF it's even less effective for chloramines.
It appears that the primary media in that filter is the KDF media, which is similar to the filter in this video, so effectiveness should be the same. Yes, the build quality is better, but is that worth 2.5 the cost? Only you can decided.. I would rather get 2.5 Boogie Blue filters..
This video is 9 years old. The promotion is still legit 1/19/2022! Thanks!
Absolutely
great videos man!!! i'm doing my first gardens alone this summer and these will help alot. 5 in all, plus a green house. i very much appreciate your scientific/analytical view :) im going to try and watch as many of your videos as i can.
thanks!!!!
home depot is where I got mine. Also most irrigation supply stores.
The filter should be stored wet, so as to maintain the carbon's porosity-structure and the copper-electrolysis signal. We've been using one for two years and love the quality of tea that we get from it. The filter is manufactured by "Pacific Sands" and sold under different labels, like "Eco-One" etc. While the chloramine scrubbing capabilities of the BB Filter are less than perfect, we've been satisfied with its results and we feel it represents an excellent cost-to-performance ratio.
very happy with my boogie blue plus+ water filter!!!
quick question though: can i keep the filter attached to my hose throughout the garden season for quick and easy access and convenience???
John, what is good non toxic hose to use with the filter? I see ones made by Bayer Science Company which is a sister company of Monsanto--advertised as urethane without lead or mercury in the metal end part but really considering the source can it be trusted
I use RV/Marine drinking water hose. Like Camco or TastePure. It’s a year late, just sharing
What kind of water filtration system would you recommend for a raised bed sprinkler system? The raised bed sprinkler system is not connected to our outdoor faucets, it's connected to our lawn sprinkler system. I'd also like to know about the filtration system you use for your indoor water. Thank you for your videos!
Boogiebrew is the best period!!'
Dear GYG'ers: We have received many requests concerning the status of your filter orders. For those of you who ordered from the 6th to 9th of March, we are sorry to report that we have to wait until the week of March 23rd before we can ship out filters again. We sincerely apologize for any inconvenience that this may cause you. The filter-manufacturer keeps back-ordering our next batch and we are helpless to do anything about it! Thanks for your patience and understanding!
Thanks for the tip John, I just ordered mine.
John, I ordered the Boogie Blue filter last year and have really seen the benefits. Thanks so much for getting us this discount. You rock, as always ! Also looking forward to planting the sun chokes I got from you...hope they do well here in South Texas.
It's fun to see the water in North America is so bad a lot of people only drink bottled water :) Here in Europe I rarely (not even yearly) buy bottled water. It's all good here :) I feel sorry for you
North Jersey purchaser here! :)
u da man! thx for your spirit!
Great! the KDF adds an anti bacterial agent to the water! I thought we were filtering that out!
If your city uses chloramine, then what is the best filter? I've heard you need an activated carbon (GAC) filter + reverse osmosis (RO) to remove the resultant ammonia. Are there any point of entry (entire house) solutions which remove chloramine that are affordable? Is ammonia after filtration of chloramine a problem?
Me too
Excellent!!!
Hi John, Thank you for the information.
Do you test the water after you install the filters?? I see a lots of filters around but how you know the filter is doing the job?
Thanks for all your hard work .
You need to go to the special gyg PAGE as listed in the description of this video to get the special price.
Thanks for the info, John. This sounds like a very effective way to filter the chlorine. Any ideas on how to know when its effectiveness is used up? I have no idea how to tell when I've used 35,000 gallons of water...
The flow of water slows way down.
Who pays your water bill lol ?
cali Kim! Omg lol good question! Gona watch your video on water filter next.😉❤
you can add a water meter at your nozzle or faucet w quick connect. I just thought about it after watching your comment. I just bought one on amazon waiting to receive it.
@@naturesvoice4890 Hi, did you receive the meter and can you please give a link? I hadn't thought of that and it's a great idea. How do you like it? Thank you for the info.
John, a better test would be to compare garden water filters and test whether or not they actually take out chlorine and flouride. Hope to see this test.
Forget removing Fluoride with a filter. It's much more difficult to remove and takes a LOT of specialized filter media that is Fluoride specific
You do it
Well...I just bought this and hooked it up.. tap water reads 452ppm and after this boogie blue plus it reads 438. I was expecting at the very least to reduce to half.
I know it works, just taste the water once. Just how effective,,, who knows without lab testing. These are fine for plants. Never had a problem with my compost brewing. Clean buckets and hoses are important.
My municipality uses chloramine rather than chlorine. Will this filter work for chloramine as well?
How is driving your used water filter to the post office for them to load it onto an diesel 18 wheeler and drive it as many as thousands of miles to california to recycle it considered 'progressive' or green/beneficial in any way whatsoever? Sorry just skeptical. Seems like burning hundreds of gallons of fossil fuel to recycle a tiny piece of plastic seems somewhat disasterous to me.
Can you use this for indoor gardening? Our waters to hard and been hauling jugs.
Good info
I have well water and my outdoor water goes thru a water softner....should i use the Boogie Blue Filter?
just ordered 3 ! : ) Thanks for the good info !
would the same thing apply to your lawn? you want to filter out the chlorine?
We all need to learn about Plastics with a Petroleum oil base... Let's think of Hemp oil based Plastic Bottles... GREEN vs Poison if you leave it in a hot car and the elements transfer to the water from the plastic... Look it up, I don't know details because I forget and well ain't looking it up till I go across that part of life again to refresh...
The filter shown in this episode is not effective at removing fluoride. Fluoride can be very difficult to remove. Only activated aluma (at low GPM), or bone char carbon, or Reverse Osmosis is effective at removing it.
Will this filter, filter out soft water? 🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔
I should add most water treatment plants don't use chlorine anymore. And yes any carbon block filter will work as long as the water flow is at a minimum. Most carbon filters don't work well if you push a lot of water through them. Did you hear the part about flow? I use both city water and rain water where I live and can't tell a difference on how my plants grow.
His website says the boogie blue "basic" doesn't filter chlorine....or..am I mistaken? That is the basic, right?
i got started with drip bc of one of your vids and soon after got a chlorine filter at your recommendation! 😊 Looking to replace the one I currently have and I need the best quality for the $$. I'm on a tight budget. When I'm looking at my options, Should I go for a filter with 1micron pore size? Or 5 microns? Or 20? I live in a Houston suburb so the waters decent but by no means great or good. Please advise!
I've been growing for 13 years, and just recently started using treated water for my plants. With few exceptions, every plant is loving life a lot more. I'm generally old school, but as my wife and I are up to 5 aquariums in the house, I've spent hundreds of hours researching and implementing microorganism cultivation and treating water (because fishkeeping is really just water-keeping). Carrying that knowledge (and aquarium waste-water, of course) into my greenhouses and gardens, there is just no comparison. Tap water was killing off the beneficial bacterial populations in my containers. It's so ridiculously obvious to anyone who has used both tap water and clean water for a decent amount of time. Maybe someday I'll run a comparison experiment, but for *me* I don't need to because most of these plants are the same species, or same plant, I've been growing for more than a decade and I know when it's doing well.
I could also write pages about how this same knowledge has benefited my health because my gut bacteria was so out of whack that 4 years ago an ounce of milk in my coffee would lay me out for a day and now I butter my toast like it's my last meal.
But back to the plants - last fall I started using aquarium waste water for my plants, and of course they flourished. Some of them I didn't want to have the extra N, so I just used the treated water, still boomed.
Bacteria is EVERYTHING. There are 100 Trillion bacteria in our guts. That's 5000x more bacteria than there are stars in the Milky Way. By population of cells (not size) humans are more bacteria than we are human! Of COURSE that carries over to plants and nutrient uptake.
The only thing I want to throw out, not as much as a disagreement but as an experience, I've had most of the same positive effects using aquarium water treatment (Seachem Safe, Seachem Prime, API Tap Water Treatment) as filtering. I think a $12 bottle of Safe costs $12 or so and treats thousands of gallons. So if you're iffy on whether or not you'll see any kind of benefit from removing chlorine/chloramine from your water - go spend $12 and see for yourself.
@Thomas John No. Reverse osmosis is required to remove chlorine and chloramine, and their removal isn't a super-high priority when it comes to caring for outdoor plants. I can't argue with the system's purpose: utilize pressurized water feed through a filter for decent water flow of medium-purified water onto your plants with the addition of a compost infuser - that's a great idea. Unfortunately the idea falls apart when you look at other aspects. The filter claims to work for 10K gallons and that's complete nonsense. Carbon filtration is okay, but carbon filtration is the third part of a 4-part water filtration system (large particulates -> small -> carbon -> RO) or the third part of your standard Brita filter - which is basically what this is.
The Good Idea (that this is): you know those in-line filters that people use on hoses for car washing? Let's make one for plants.
Where It Falls Apart: the car-washers are concerned with removing particulates (easy) and not chlorine and chloramine (hard, not achieved by an in-line filter of that size, not a huge priority for outdoor plants, and you'll burn out filters so fast that unless they're $0.50 apiece there's better ways to spend your time and money for growing.)
The compost tea infuser is a good idea, but fertilizer attachments for hoses have been around for a long time and rightly so because they're actually very useful. CRF (controlled release fertilizer) gets around needing fertilized water but it has a much decreased payoff for its much increased ease of use. Inline fertilization applies foliar feeding, doesn't over-distribute during heavy rain periods, and doesn't entice certain suicidal wildlife into eating CRF pellets (which is uncommon but happens).
So... inline filter for hose for plants: no. In-line fert attachment for hose: yes.
What name does it go by? Thanks for pointing this out.
Have you heard of any way to get rid of chloramine? Besides getting an RO unit I have no idea of what to do about that.
John, also just ordered my chlorine water filter this morning.. Is the input water pressure a concern for proper filtering? Thanks for all the great gardening advice. It's like taking an on-line course, for free! :) Regards, Victor
thank you John!! I've been thinking about filtering my hose water but hadn't gotten around to it
Would this work with salty water like water from the salton sea???
Boogie Brew does not ship promptly. You can expect to wait up to two months for your order. Not a good thing when you are gardening.
the gard'n'gro is better, replaceable filters is the way to go
Eden brand filter eliminates chlorine part from chloramine, but not amonia. I am wondering, if these filters do the same or dothey remove it?
Anyone wanna help me figure out the best filter for drinking water in the home? I'd love to get rid off/reduce fluoride and any radiological elements, in addition to the upto .02 microns filtered by many I've seen. I have trouble with understanding the lab results they post showing the accurate levels filtered...it just makes me want to drink more wine.... I was also looking for something portable, my youngest will be off to college and I'm gonna roam the country...any ideas? bottle/straw/?
KDF and copper filters... aren't they ANTI BACTERIAL? This would mean, they would kill everything in the compost tea or soil that you are watering doesn't it? This filter uses kdf and copper. How is it the best?
buy boogie brew products!
1337Sauce haha right. Its filtered BEFORE use in tea.
James Lindberg Thats a good point. The first filter he showed was a carbon filter and they point that out in their description of their product. I guess one would need to test each one with a compost brew and see which one is better.
Our filter is rated at aprox. 87% chloramine reduction and 99.7% chlorine removal. How is a kdf membrane supposed to work against those evil & stubborn chloramines? The manufacturer states that the membrane is reinforced with copper-quartz threading in the filter's high-density carbon-block. This generates a tiny electrical signal which is supposed to aid in neutralizing the gaseous (ammonia-bound) chlorine molecule. It DOES seem to work, quite effective in Boogie's own usage.
Dear GYG'ers: Recently, we received large numbers of orders for filters & other products. We apologize for the delays and out-of-stocks. Products became back-ordered FAST! To compound matters, some of our suppliers failed to ship new items in a timely fashion; leaving us unable to re-stock in time to satisfy the demand. We are now restocked with strong inventories on everything except filters, which will be in soon!! We have caught up with orders and deeply appreciate your patience!
Do you know where I can find the inline particulate filter that you mention at the beginning of the video?
Just hook the shit up please
can you give me a secure site to buy the exact products you have my friend ^^
enjoy learning from you and everything you doim trying to becoem self reliant keep it up man
I saw one vid and a guy has a big barrel/tank with hose to his garden. How about other chemical besides chlorine in water if any?
Hey John, if you have a whole house filter do you really need extra filters for your outdoor tap?
Ordered the filter as well as the intermediate package of teas. Tea came.... Filters on back order and brew boys don't want to answer emails.. I suggest a different company
I heard you say you use a water filter for your house too, I'm curious to know what system you use for your drinking water filter system. Your gardening videos are very informative and I learnt quite some good information from them, thanks!
I searched with the keywords "inline hose filter"... a lot of hits, but NO products for $11.99 that I could see (maybe the price has changed?). And how do you know that it's the "100% the same filter"? I'm just curious... not trying to be a smarty pants either.
Would it not make more sense to put the filter at the end of the water hose(attaching the spray nozzle to the filter) to filter the chemicals out of the water hose? .
Thanks 🙏
Can i use this for a spotless wash in my mobile detailing van using a pressure washer
I'm trying to find the same thing. The calcium where I live is horrendous!!!
Best to buy the ones with catalytic carbon
how do u know when the filter is no longer working?
Usually when nothing is coming out of the filter.
I want to remove fluoride from the water ..Fluoride is almost impossible to remove.
Is this water safe to drink, ie does it remove enough stuff for humans to safely drink the h20 and replace buying bottled water or having a sink filter
I have hard water and it once left a really tough rust stain in my shower. Bleach would not do anything to it and it seemed like you could scrub it for hours and get no where. For that sort of rust stain I like acidic rust removers that specifically say that they contain either hydrochloric or preferably hydroflouric acid. They are both very nasty in their own ways but the ones containing hydroflouric acid just cut right through the rust stain in a similar way to spilled bleach ruining a favorite shirt.
Now for outside the house for washing my car, I am considering a filter for the hose. I don't use waxes anymore on my car but I have gotten to like nano-coatings, in particular the ones that just spray on and rinse and are good for 3 or more months. They are like having Rain-X all over the whole car that is how well they repel water. On my next trip out of the house I am going to see if I can find a filter that attaches to the garden hose or one I can adapt to it without much difficulty. I don't notice mineral build up on my car as it is and it is a dark blue color 06 Jetta. I just like to keep it shiny.
Did you watch the video, lol? It's not about hate... it's about understanding what chlorine/chlorine compounds do to the microorganisms in soil. These compounds are added to municipal water for good reason(s), but they are detrimental to organic soil... and not great for drinking water either. Besides adding a taste to the water that's generally considered unpleasant, chlorine has been linked to a possible increased risk for cancer.
I thought I was going to see a video of it being USED?!
Using it? you mean water coming out of a hose?
@@cornbread7710 a side by side comparison if it actually works would be nice. it has been 10 years now.
Well, this also prevent the water from staining my car? Because I have a sprinkler that my community put in right next to my car and it’s turning green.
He may mention fluoride but it does not say it removes it anywhere on the site, can we confirm with solid proof?
Was so disappointed, the filter reduced my pressure so much, I could not even run a sprinkler. (My pressure out of the faucet is 85psi)
Thanks for your response John, it's important to me to remove the fluoride and if my kid was ever to drink off of, thanks again for your honest reply!
I wish us Canadians could get these deals, heck... I wish we could just get the boogie brew blue.
Wish these shipped to Australia :( Lucky US GYG viewers!
me too. i haven't found any products over here to filter water for organic gardening! you?
Do you have any cheaper alternatives cuz this product is 60+ dollars now
I have always used the boodie blue filter for my garden and farm animals but I have never received any tea I am bummed.
Just ordered :-) kindly keep on working on good deals for the benefit of all. Thanks John.
They sell this exact same filter on Amazon without the Boogie Brew label for 11.99.
Just an FYI, not trying to be a smarty pants
Who does?
@@WholeNewMom Well it's gone up a bit in price the last 7 years. It's now $17 www.amazon.com/dp/B0006IX87S?pd_rd_i=B0006IX87S&pd_rd_w=9gngK&pf_rd_p=fd6fc310-8916-4ea3-9307-7d3bdb7f58d4&pd_rd_wg=QFF0m&pf_rd_r=NMV47EHR5F0SH2JCYG8J&pd_rd_r=35c7912e-fb25-4f17-809a-1a3e409e9246
@@MuahMan Wow very good. I'm assuming you checked the specs on this and it's the same? I did see that many of these filters say that they will work for 6 mos, but this one states 3. Did you notice that?
This one, for example, states 6 mos. www.amazon.com/AQUA-CREST-Protector-Compatible-Gardening/dp/B07YCJ33Q4/
Thanks so much!
Gender changer operation. LOL!!!
I am looking for something to sort of filter to get tons of minerals from the water. I want to be able to wash cars and things without having it looks like its still dirty right after the water dries.
Can either of these filters be used to filter drinking water?
Most likely, since I drink spicket water all the time and I'm fine :)
No it doesn't filter tds
$11.99 for a rated 4,000 gallons, Boogie Blue's rated at 35,000 to 45,000. It is actually higher price.
What if I have fluoride in my water?
I bought the boogie blue based on your recommend. Im on Highly alkaline 830 PH.....with TDS at like 450.........when i ran the hose with boogie blue ...i stil got high TDS
filters like that do not remove minerals. they usually break down the chlorine. sometimes they even increase tds. it is basically a shower filter.
Do plants and trees filter the water or at least convert it to something less bad?
Can anyone suggest a cheap easy to use plug n play garden hose filter? I want to use it with my pressure washer to wash my car without leaving water spots...
Boogie brew line of filters work best, i tried them all, i used to use a different brand rated to 8,000gallons but this is BY FAR the best cost effective for up to 40,000 gallons or so. i replace my filter ONE TIME a year, and use it daily. After switching to boogie blue of course. best of luck in finding a better one lol
My water has salt in it, and leaves shitty streaks on my truck, is there a filter that would help with that
Does the coupon still work??
Why not just use vitamin c for chloramine and chlorine,?
The water that you're filtering is it safe for Wildlife and Fish
I have very rusty water lookin for a simple solution.
I have a tank I can fill with town water and let it sit a whole before using to water garden. Thinking the chlorine would lose its effectiveness making it safer? Am I wrong about this? (I've been wrong in my life once or twice... lol) 😁
Sit a "while"... won't let me edit...
Can you direct me to a science-based study that supports your claims? I'm reluctant to implement practices in my garden that cost me time and/or money unless there is objective evidence supporting the practice. Thanks in advance.
The science behind filtering tap water has to do with the facts you can find all over the internet on how chlorine isnt good for plants as it inhibits its abilities to take in nutrients. I must mention, that chlorine was used in WW1 as a way to kill the enemy in battle with gas. It is a highly poisonous substance, which is why many are getting sick from eating plants drenched with chlorinated water. thats only chlorine, if i mention all of the other harmful chemicals and substances found in water we drink and give our plants, i would be dead before i finish the first chapter. Its good you asked, we all should do our part in helping others understand these unregulated chemicals in our water and in the food we eat effect us alike. I was a sceptical one, but keep in mind i used to also shop at WholeFoods, which is now owned and operated by Monsanto, who is notoriously know for using harmful chemicals unatural to natire and call them organic crops by paying off our own regulatiors in the food industry. Our water is at the point of no return, filter it with an RODI unit and you will see the biggest difference. Reef tank systems cannot survive without properly filtered water, well they can, but like our own oceans, there is a detrimental effect on the corals, bleaching and killing them, our planet earth is meant to be free of chemicals.
This may be a dumb question but doesn't such a simple thing as table salt contain chlorine (and I think some sodium too)?
+Captain Ron Yes, table salt contains sodium and chlorine, and you wouldn't sprinkle salt on your garden either. Ions like sodium and chlorine decrease the bioavailability of plant nutrients in the soil, which also exist as ions (nitrate and ammonium, for example).
I wasn't thinking about using table salt in my garden, I was thinking about sodium and chlorine (chlorides) being "bad" chemicals (maybe I should say "elements"). Probably has to do with proportions. I''ve learned that good garden soil shows traces of elements such as manganese, copper, boron, chlorine and molybdenum. Believe it or not, there may be such nutrients as cobalt and and strontium (both can be radio-active (surprises me). I was surprised to learn that sulfur is an active element in good garden soil.
I used to be afraid of chemicals but I learned that everything is a chemical. Its the proportions that matter.
Captain Ron properties of molecules or compounds are different than the properties of its components. H2O or water has different qualities than H2O2 or hydrogen peroxide. A quick study of basic chemistry will demonstrate this. I’m a retired science teacher with 30 years experience teaching Natural Sciences including Chemistry & Physics.
rain water has pollutants too and also washes the pollution off the surface of where you collect the water via roof or rain gutters ..etc. you can make a gravity feed rain water barrel with the hose attachment and still use the water filter.
Do you have a tutorial how to put it on the drip system too?