View Full Version : Re: New Filter. Green Water
Just Me \Koi\
July 31st 03, 07:15 AM
The answer is YES! But you are on the road to permanent recovery and clear
water.
Don't add anymore fish to your pond, and don't change your water or mess
with your filter! Patience!
--
_______________________________________
"The difference between 'involvement' and 'commitment' is
like an eggs-and-ham breakfast:
The chicken was 'involved' - the pig was 'committed'."
http://community.webshots.com/user/godwino
"Km" > wrote in message
...
> Maybe someone can advise me. My pond water (2500 gallon pond) has
gradually
> become greener and greener over the years as the fish load increased. I
had
> a 100 gallon bio-filter. So I increased the filter by adding another
filter
> in parallel with the other filter for a total filter size of 450 gallons.
> But here's what happened. Within about a week the pond started clearing.
> By two weeks it was crystal clear, even in hot weather. I was elated and
> could see the fish once again. However, after another two weeks the pond
> has turned green again. Terrible disappointment. But the question is:
Is
> this normal? Can I expect it to cycle back and forth for a while as the
new
> filter grows more bacteria and then eventually stabilize? Thanks for
your
> help. Green Bob
>
>
~ jan JJsPond.us
July 31st 03, 07:27 AM
I pretty much agree, but Green Bob, I think you ought to test your water.
What is your maintenance schedule like? How many fish & types do you have
in this 2500 pond? What kind of media did you use in the filter? ~ jan
See jj's ponds and filter design: http://users.owt.com/jjspond/
>On Thu, 31 Jul 2003 06:15:49 GMT, "Just Me \"Koi\"" wrote:
>The answer is YES! But you are on the road to permanent recovery and clear
>water.
>
>Don't add anymore fish to your pond, and don't change your water or mess
>with your filter! Patience!
>
>"Km" > wrote in message
>> Maybe someone can advise me. My pond water (2500 gallon pond) has gradually
>> become greener and greener over the years as the fish load increased. I had
>> a 100 gallon bio-filter. So I increased the filter by adding another filter
>> in parallel with the other filter for a total filter size of 450 gallons.
>> But here's what happened. Within about a week the pond started clearing.
>> By two weeks it was crystal clear, even in hot weather. I was elated and
>> could see the fish once again. However, after another two weeks the pond
>> has turned green again. Terrible disappointment. But the question is: Is
>> this normal? Can I expect it to cycle back and forth for a while as the new
>> filter grows more bacteria and then eventually stabilize? Thanks for your
>> help. Green Bob
>>
>>
>
BenignVanilla
July 31st 03, 03:38 PM
"Km" > wrote in message
...
> Maybe someone can advise me. My pond water (2500 gallon pond) has
gradually
> become greener and greener over the years as the fish load increased. I
had
> a 100 gallon bio-filter. So I increased the filter by adding another
filter
> in parallel with the other filter for a total filter size of 450 gallons.
> But here's what happened. Within about a week the pond started clearing.
> By two weeks it was crystal clear, even in hot weather. I was elated and
> could see the fish once again. However, after another two weeks the pond
> has turned green again. Terrible disappointment. But the question is:
Is
> this normal? Can I expect it to cycle back and forth for a while as the
new
> filter grows more bacteria and then eventually stabilize? Thanks for
your
> help. Green Bob
1. NO water changes, you just feed the algae that way.
2. NO more fish, you just feed the algae that way.
3. DON'T rinse your filter media with non-pond water, you just feed the
algae that way.
4. Throw some more plants in, you starve the algae that way.
5. Abide by the golden rule, STOP MESSING WITH THE DAMN POND!!!
BV.
DavidM
July 31st 03, 04:14 PM
> 1. NO water changes, you just feed the algae that way.
> 2. NO more fish, you just feed the algae that way.
> 3. DON'T rinse your filter media with non-pond water, you just feed the
> algae that way.
> 4. Throw some more plants in, you starve the algae that way.
> 5. Abide by the golden rule, STOP MESSING WITH THE DAMN POND!!!
>
> BV.
These rules work well with my pond. However, I have lots of plant in a small
1000gallon pond and still suffered from green water this year. All it took
was one treatment with 'Green Away', an algae aggregating agent we get in
the UK, and it cleared over night. The plants grew at an amazing rate for
the next week, took over from the algae as main nutrient sink, and the pond
has stayed clear.
I think it all depends on the weather during spring, and whether plants or
algae get established first as the dominant life form. Algae seemed to be
winning this year (until I defeated them).
David
UK
Critical Popperian
July 31st 03, 08:59 PM
> 1. NO water changes, you just feed the algae that way.
> 2. NO more fish, you just feed the algae that way.
> 3. DON'T rinse your filter media with non-pond water, you just feed the
> algae that way.
> 4. Throw some more plants in, you starve the algae that way.
> 5. Abide by the golden rule, STOP MESSING WITH THE DAMN POND!!!
He... BV, we might not agree on politics, but this post cracked me up!
BenignVanilla
August 1st 03, 02:02 PM
"Critical Popperian" > wrote in message
om...
> > 1. NO water changes, you just feed the algae that way.
> > 2. NO more fish, you just feed the algae that way.
> > 3. DON'T rinse your filter media with non-pond water, you just feed the
> > algae that way.
> > 4. Throw some more plants in, you starve the algae that way.
> > 5. Abide by the golden rule, STOP MESSING WITH THE DAMN POND!!!
>
>
> He... BV, we might not agree on politics, but this post cracked me up!
I'd like to agree, but that just wouldn't be any fun. :)
BV.
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