Hi again folks.
I'm wondering if anyone here has to soften their water?
If so, what do you use?
I read somewhere that borax works for that, but I'm not sure, because I've never tried it (never had to).
The reason I'm asking this is because I'm starting a commercial soapmaking operation in Africa and the area the soap will be made in has no running water.
They use either creek water or rainwater.
It rains a lot in Ghana. Rain is caught as it run off of rooftops, but I'm not sure that my sister-in-law will have enough rooftop run-off available to supply the soaping operation when it grows to a larger capacity.
If there isn't enough rainwater she may need to use creekwater. If so, then she may need a cheap way to soften the creekwater.
If borax works, and if it's cheap enough, and if it's available locally, then she'll be fine with using creekwater.
Of course the creekwater may not have enough colloidal mineral content to be a problem anyway. Testing will tell, I guess.
Any input on this topic?
I'm wondering if anyone here has to soften their water?
If so, what do you use?
I read somewhere that borax works for that, but I'm not sure, because I've never tried it (never had to).
The reason I'm asking this is because I'm starting a commercial soapmaking operation in Africa and the area the soap will be made in has no running water.
They use either creek water or rainwater.
It rains a lot in Ghana. Rain is caught as it run off of rooftops, but I'm not sure that my sister-in-law will have enough rooftop run-off available to supply the soaping operation when it grows to a larger capacity.
If there isn't enough rainwater she may need to use creekwater. If so, then she may need a cheap way to soften the creekwater.
If borax works, and if it's cheap enough, and if it's available locally, then she'll be fine with using creekwater.
Of course the creekwater may not have enough colloidal mineral content to be a problem anyway. Testing will tell, I guess.
Any input on this topic?