SOO very excited to be joining you all on the playa for my FIRST BURN EVER
THANKS FOR THE HELP!!!
This is not correct. The playa is alkaline. It removes the moisture from your skin, which is what causes the painful reaction known as "playa foot." L.A. tapwater does not have this effect.Token wrote:The whole vinegar alkaline playa thing is such an urban legend.
The Playa dust is about as alkaline as Los Angeles tap water.
heikediguoren wrote:This is not correct. The playa is alkaline. It removes the moisture from your skin, which is what causes the painful reaction known as "playa foot." L.A. tapwater does not have this effect.Token wrote:The whole vinegar alkaline playa thing is such an urban legend.
The Playa dust is about as alkaline as Los Angeles tap water.
You can observe the alkalinity if you put a handful of playa dust in a cup and pour some white vinegar over it. The dust will fizz, showing that the vinegar is reacting with the dust. I think the reaction is:
CH3COOH + CaCO3 -> CaCH3COO + CO2 + H2O
(fixed)
vinegar + playa -> calcium acetate + carbon dioxide + water
If anyone knows how to balance the reaction, feel free to jump in.
Which is why all of this is Horse Shitâ„¢. The playa is MILDLY alkali, which is to say it qualifies as not being neutral. No worse than allot of tap water out there or soapy spring water at best.Marscrumbs wrote:Playa dust probably contains more gypsum CaSO4 and Soda Na2Co3 than calcite CaCO3. but I'm just guessing.
Alkaii dust although hypertonic, dry out the skin more by removing protective oils. Much like soap does. Laundry detergent usually contains soda just for this reason.
heikediguoren wrote:This is not correct. The playa is alkaline. It removes the moisture from your skin, which is what causes the painful reaction known as "playa foot." L.A. tapwater does not have this effect.Token wrote:The whole vinegar alkaline playa thing is such an urban legend.
The Playa dust is about as alkaline as Los Angeles tap water.
You can observe the alkalinity if you put a handful of playa dust in a cup and pour some white vinegar over it. The dust will fizz, showing that the vinegar is reacting with the dust. I think the reaction is:
CH3COOH + CaCO3 -> CaCH3COO + CO2 + H2O
(fixed)
vinegar + playa -> calcium acetate + carbon dioxide + water
If anyone knows how to balance the reaction, feel free to jump in.