Hi folks. For convenience I figured I’d get the ratios of the ingredients and make up a jar of powder to scoop from to easily and quickly make snake juice.
The only problem I see with this is that the particles are different sizes and textures, so you wouldn’t be getting the exact same in every scoop - but my gut feeling is that I’d probably be fine and get most of what I need on average. For me a good shake of the jar to mix it up and getting roughly everything needed in and the convenience of it all outweighs having to do a chemistry lab each time I want to make two litres of snake juice.
Here’s what I did:
So for 2l of snake juice, I’d normally use 1 teaspoon of Potassium Chloride (NoSalt), 1 teaspoon of sodium bicarbonate, 1/2 teaspoon of salt (pink Himalayan) and 1/2 teaspoon of magnesium sulphate.
Looking at the ingredients’ ratios, it takes equal amounts of magnesium sulphate and pink salt, and double that amount of equal amounts of potassium chloride and sodium bicarbonate. Mix that into a jar and shake it up.
You’d use for example 100g magnesium sulphate, 100g pink salt, 200g potassium chloride, 200g sodium bicarbonate. Now, to prepare 2 litres of snake juice, that would be three teaspoons of the mix. (tTo prepare 1 litre it’d be a teaspoon and a half and so on).
Total lazy genius or complete dumbass?
You are right that you may have an issue with the densities causing not exact ratios in the mix, but it could work out just fine. I’d say go with it and if you notice fatigue with normal fluid intake then you know the balance is somewhat off and can adjust.Edit: spelling
I do not think thats a good idea. Just dont be lazy and put the stuff in different jars because the way you do it your ratios will be all over the place and in the best case this can cause diarrhea in the worst this can send you to the hospital.
There will be some settling for sure and your ratios per could get skewed a little
Could potentially be dangerous honestly
You can’t just throw powders in and shake them up and expect them to be evenly mixed. Supplement companies rotate their powders on a horizontal axis and monitor their mix sequences etc. for what they call hotspots( where too much of a product gets concentrated in the mix)