Chlorine In Water.??

Pump Hill Peeps

Chirping
9 Years
Aug 3, 2010
29
1
90
Jordan, NY
I have a 550 gal water tank that fills from my barn roof (metal). After a week or 2 or 3. i get a slight algea build up and the water gets a greenish tint to it. I use this water mainly for our gardens but the chickens get some in a separate 50 gal barrel that I run a hose to. Can I, and if so, add a small amount of chlorine to it to sanitize the water? I use chlorine to sanitize my beer making equipment at a rate of a cap full to 5 gal. Has anyone tried this? Of course I don't want to pioson the chicks. Just looking for a way to give them clean water without lugging it 200 yards every day.
 
I would use hydrogen peroxide to sanitize the water because of all the contaminants and potential for bio film growth. I would use darkness to prevent algae growth.
Also, peroxide is more stable in higher temperatures than chlorine.
Generally the water will be more palatable after that period of time using peroxide rather than chlorine.

I would not use vinegar; formulated (like from the store), ACV, raw, with mother or sediments, or motherless with or without sediments for this situation. vinegar
 
Quote:
This explains it better than I could considering my typing endurance.
http://www.ozoneservices.com/articles/008.htm

In the poultry industry we like to have 10 PPM delivered to the open basin type waterer furthest from the treated water source. In closed drinker systems (nipples) we like to have 2 or 3 PPM at the same location.

You see it isn't a matter of how much water you have but how much contamination is in the for the H2O2 to react with. That is why it is tested at the delivery point.

We found that 20 PPM did not adversely affect layers when they drank it for week 2 to 16 of their lives.
 
If you are using community water it already has chlorine in it. I surely would not add more. I have had good results adding Braggs Organic ACV at the rate of one Tablespoon per gallon
which has kept algae out of the water. Do not use the ACV you find on store shelves, such as Heintz. It is pasteurized and does not work. Find the organic.
 
So where do you find ACV? I would like to put this in our dogs water buckets, they are always turning green. Haven't had that problem (YET) with the chickens, but I am sure we will eventually.
 
I found mine in the health food section of Kroger. Most health food places carry it. I use Braggs Organic ACV, because that is what Kroger carried. The brand
shouldn't matter as long as it is organic.
 

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