Well I was figuring that since we converted insoluble CaCO3 into a soluble salt, then the Calcium Citrate would be able to be taken up by the plant roots and used for nutrition (which would remove it from the water). Or perhaps because it is soluble, it could get flushed out of the root zone- as opposed to the the insoluble Calcium Carbonate - which cannot be taken up by the roots and may stay in the soil (root zone of plants) longer.
I don't want to get rid of the Calcium. My garden needs calcium. I just need it to be able to be used by the plants. I have an RO filter. I don't use it to water my garden because I want all the minerals in the tap water for the plants. Plus it would take forever. The issue is that my soil has a pH of around 7.0 and some plants like tomatoes like a lower pH. I have been lowering the pH of my water to around 6.2 - 6.4 before watering. Supposedly an ideal pH for nutrient uptake in soil is around 6.5. I was told it was a waste of time and energy to lower the pH before watering.
The discussion heads off in a biology or botany direction. The CaCO3 in the soil in another issue. It will buffer the water I throw at at. Plus it is said that micro organisms will deliver nutrients to the roots regardless of pH.
So I guess the real question is what I am doing? LOL I don't know. Is there any reason to lower the pH of water (by adding acid) before watering plants in soil? I thought that converting to a soluble salt would make it harder for the calcium to build up in the soil. I do not want the pH of the soil to get any higher. I'd like to lower it.
So what would be the difference (instantaneously at each watering, and long term) between watering straight from the hose with water that has pH of 8.0 and 120 mg/l CaCO3 into soil with pH of 7.0, compared to that same water treated with citric acid and pH lowered to 6.0 then used on soil with pH of 7.0.
Will the soil buffer the water to 7.0 regardless of the input pH? Can the soil pH go up or down based on what I do, or don't do, to the water I feed it? Can I add extra citric acid to the water in hope that it will react with the CaCO3 in the soil, so that it gets dissolved, flushed away or replaced with calcium citrate? Is there even any benefits if that does happen?
Potential benefits I see (the reasoning behind my use of lemon juice that I am trying to justify)...
-Lowers pH of nutrient solution in the soil (at time of watering).
-Lowers the pH of the soil over time.
-Makes minerals/nutrients available to be "drank" by roots by converting to a soluble salt
I guess I'm looking for a chemist's answer to a "what happens if..." gardening question.