Could also soak it in hot distilled water.

Ode


At 11:03 AM 5/19/2010 -0400, you wrote:
This is my theory which I am going to test out. I have a former pickle jar that smells even after washing scrubbing with soap and water. I am going to fill it to the top with a thick clay slurry and leave it in the sun for a week

My theory is that clay will pull out the food/pickle ions that made their way into the glass. Maybe this process will take a month

REASONING-- sometimes you have this ideal jar due to the volume, electrode length and spacing it can accommodate ...You want to make colloidal silver in it but it is a former pickle jar. Ideally you want to make silver in small batches due to the decline in uS that takes place.

So you just might have the perfect smaller jar in mind but, dang! dang! dang! it was used for pickles, olives or spaghetti or tomato sauce. Fact is most glass jars you will find in supermarkets have acidic foods in them because these acidic foods would taste like crap if sold in a tin can. Glass resists these foods but still they worm their way into the glass. So supermarket glass is an amusing trap. Lots of glass there but all with acid foods in them that throw off the colloidal silver making

If you don't want to buy clay but you have clay in your soil. Just use that in a thick slurry



Thanks
Garrick


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