I am connected to a municipal water source at my house which is near my biochar production site. When it is time to put out the fire, I can turn on a garden hose and deluge the fire until it goes out. I realize that not everyone has such easy access to a volume of water and it got me thinking. How do you manage your quench water when water is not so easily sourced?
What does everyone do for quench water?
I could imagine that this might be a good place to reuse grey water, but one would have to accumulate that water and then be able to dump it where they would want it.
Has anyone figured out how much water it actually takes? I feel like I use a bunch of water every time, more than I think it would normally take at least.
I prefer rainwater, but if it's not available, I make due with city water.
Our city water has chloramine, which doesn't evaporate.
Ideally , one would use reuse the same rainwater over and over.
My home runs on rainwater, so I have to be cognizant during the dry season. I have gone to doing the leaning barrel method. When it’s done, I do a quick steam to help crack the carbon and cool it slightly, then put the lid on and let it cool down without oxygen. I probably use 5 gallons for a 55 gallon barrel batch. There is no water left, it all steams off by morning.
"You must be the change you want to see in the world." "First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win." --Mahatma Gandhi
"Preach the Gospel always, and if necessary, use words." --Francis of Assisi.
"Family farms work when the whole family works the farm." -- Adam Klaus
I make my biochar in the driveway, so access to the hose is easy. Quenching it activates it. The biochar is close to sterile at that point. If you let the water sit for 4 hours, the chlorine will waft off. If you add a small amount of compost or similar, it will break down the chloramine. Enough to turn it light brown. Chloramine kills the biological activity in the water. They put it in the pipes because sometimes the water takes a week to get to you.
Because I heat with wood. so I use tin #10 cans in my stove. Cut one end from each, drill a 1/2" hole in each raminaing end, crimp to to fit into the other, pack with wood chip and put on a fire. The drilled holes will produce flames as the gas gets burned off. If you have several cans you cans you get more char. It isn't as fast as burning logs but the smaller chips are easier to break up and it doesn't require constant attention.