View Full Version : Suggestions for best filter plants
Stephen M. Henning
May 5th 04, 01:11 PM
I have a 20,000 gallon pond (17'x47'x2'-4') with just minnows, no Koi.
I put my filter plants directly in the pond rather than in a special
veggie filter. My pond is spring fed, so I need fairly aggressive
filter plants. The pond has stone wall sides (old swimming pool) but I
have greenhouse benches under the water around the outside so I can use
marginals or under water plants. My biggest problem is string algae.
It even grows on the end of the spring pipes, so the spring water has a
fair amount of nutrients in it. What are my best choices? Zone 6.
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Benign Vanilla
May 5th 04, 01:54 PM
"Stephen M. Henning" > wrote in message
...
> I have a 20,000 gallon pond (17'x47'x2'-4') with just minnows, no Koi.
> I put my filter plants directly in the pond rather than in a special
> veggie filter. My pond is spring fed, so I need fairly aggressive
> filter plants. The pond has stone wall sides (old swimming pool) but I
> have greenhouse benches under the water around the outside so I can use
> marginals or under water plants. My biggest problem is string algae.
> It even grows on the end of the spring pipes, so the spring water has a
> fair amount of nutrients in it. What are my best choices? Zone 6.
The best filter plants are those with a dense root system. There are
marginals that work very well like Water Iris, and Water Celery, and
floaters such as Water Hyacinth and Water Lettuce. The floaters usually
spread voraciously, so that is something to think about. The Iris are not as
efficient, but they are nice to look at. The water celery has a great root
system, and grows hardily in many zones. A nice blend of plants will give
you a nice look and give you good filtering.
Last year I jump started my VF with duckweed and watercress. The duckweed
eventually got eaten, but the water cress grew voraciously in my stream. Two
more great filter plants.
--
BV.
www.iheartmypond.com
Benign Vanilla
May 5th 04, 01:54 PM
"Stephen M. Henning" > wrote in message
...
> I have a 20,000 gallon pond (17'x47'x2'-4') with just minnows, no Koi.
> I put my filter plants directly in the pond rather than in a special
> veggie filter. My pond is spring fed, so I need fairly aggressive
> filter plants. The pond has stone wall sides (old swimming pool) but I
> have greenhouse benches under the water around the outside so I can use
> marginals or under water plants. My biggest problem is string algae.
> It even grows on the end of the spring pipes, so the spring water has a
> fair amount of nutrients in it. What are my best choices? Zone 6.
The best filter plants are those with a dense root system. There are
marginals that work very well like Water Iris, and Water Celery, and
floaters such as Water Hyacinth and Water Lettuce. The floaters usually
spread voraciously, so that is something to think about. The Iris are not as
efficient, but they are nice to look at. The water celery has a great root
system, and grows hardily in many zones. A nice blend of plants will give
you a nice look and give you good filtering.
Last year I jump started my VF with duckweed and watercress. The duckweed
eventually got eaten, but the water cress grew voraciously in my stream. Two
more great filter plants.
--
BV.
www.iheartmypond.com
water celery. variegated is pretty.. plant it right on edge of the pond and let it
grow into and out of the pond. also, louisiana iris spread well, good upright form.
they split containers.
"Stephen M. Henning" > wrote:
>I have a 20,000 gallon pond (17'x47'x2'-4') with just minnows, no Koi.
>I put my filter plants directly in the pond rather than in a special
>veggie filter. My pond is spring fed, so I need fairly aggressive
>filter plants. The pond has stone wall sides (old swimming pool) but I
>have greenhouse benches under the water around the outside so I can use
>marginals or under water plants. My biggest problem is string algae.
>It even grows on the end of the spring pipes, so the spring water has a
>fair amount of nutrients in it. What are my best choices? Zone 6.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List
http://puregold.aquaria.net/
www.drsolo.com
Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other
compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the
endorsements or recommendations I make.
water celery. variegated is pretty.. plant it right on edge of the pond and let it
grow into and out of the pond. also, louisiana iris spread well, good upright form.
they split containers.
"Stephen M. Henning" > wrote:
>I have a 20,000 gallon pond (17'x47'x2'-4') with just minnows, no Koi.
>I put my filter plants directly in the pond rather than in a special
>veggie filter. My pond is spring fed, so I need fairly aggressive
>filter plants. The pond has stone wall sides (old swimming pool) but I
>have greenhouse benches under the water around the outside so I can use
>marginals or under water plants. My biggest problem is string algae.
>It even grows on the end of the spring pipes, so the spring water has a
>fair amount of nutrients in it. What are my best choices? Zone 6.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List
http://puregold.aquaria.net/
www.drsolo.com
Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other
compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the
endorsements or recommendations I make.
Just Me \Koi\
May 5th 04, 08:02 PM
In addition to Water Hyacinth & watercress, I will strongly recommend
Pennyworth (spelling?) Plant them, bring the kids and dogs in quickly as
they (pennyworth) grow fast and furious!
--
_______________________________________
"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
"Benign Vanilla" > wrote in message
...
>
> "Stephen M. Henning" > wrote in message
> ...
> > I have a 20,000 gallon pond (17'x47'x2'-4') with just minnows, no Koi.
> > I put my filter plants directly in the pond rather than in a special
> > veggie filter. My pond is spring fed, so I need fairly aggressive
> > filter plants. The pond has stone wall sides (old swimming pool) but I
> > have greenhouse benches under the water around the outside so I can use
> > marginals or under water plants. My biggest problem is string algae.
> > It even grows on the end of the spring pipes, so the spring water has a
> > fair amount of nutrients in it. What are my best choices? Zone 6.
>
> The best filter plants are those with a dense root system. There are
> marginals that work very well like Water Iris, and Water Celery, and
> floaters such as Water Hyacinth and Water Lettuce. The floaters usually
> spread voraciously, so that is something to think about. The Iris are not
as
> efficient, but they are nice to look at. The water celery has a great root
> system, and grows hardily in many zones. A nice blend of plants will give
> you a nice look and give you good filtering.
>
> Last year I jump started my VF with duckweed and watercress. The duckweed
> eventually got eaten, but the water cress grew voraciously in my stream.
Two
> more great filter plants.
>
> --
> BV.
> www.iheartmypond.com
>
>
>
Just Me \Koi\
May 5th 04, 08:02 PM
In addition to Water Hyacinth & watercress, I will strongly recommend
Pennyworth (spelling?) Plant them, bring the kids and dogs in quickly as
they (pennyworth) grow fast and furious!
--
_______________________________________
"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
"Benign Vanilla" > wrote in message
...
>
> "Stephen M. Henning" > wrote in message
> ...
> > I have a 20,000 gallon pond (17'x47'x2'-4') with just minnows, no Koi.
> > I put my filter plants directly in the pond rather than in a special
> > veggie filter. My pond is spring fed, so I need fairly aggressive
> > filter plants. The pond has stone wall sides (old swimming pool) but I
> > have greenhouse benches under the water around the outside so I can use
> > marginals or under water plants. My biggest problem is string algae.
> > It even grows on the end of the spring pipes, so the spring water has a
> > fair amount of nutrients in it. What are my best choices? Zone 6.
>
> The best filter plants are those with a dense root system. There are
> marginals that work very well like Water Iris, and Water Celery, and
> floaters such as Water Hyacinth and Water Lettuce. The floaters usually
> spread voraciously, so that is something to think about. The Iris are not
as
> efficient, but they are nice to look at. The water celery has a great root
> system, and grows hardily in many zones. A nice blend of plants will give
> you a nice look and give you good filtering.
>
> Last year I jump started my VF with duckweed and watercress. The duckweed
> eventually got eaten, but the water cress grew voraciously in my stream.
Two
> more great filter plants.
>
> --
> BV.
> www.iheartmypond.com
>
>
>
jammer
May 6th 04, 12:11 AM
Primrose and parrot feather.
On Wed, 05 May 2004 12:11:50 GMT, "Stephen M. Henning"
> wrote:
>I have a 20,000 gallon pond (17'x47'x2'-4') with just minnows, no
Koi.
>I put my filter plants directly in the pond rather than in a special
>veggie filter. My pond is spring fed, so I need fairly aggressive
>filter plants. The pond has stone wall sides (old swimming pool) but
I
>have greenhouse benches under the water around the outside so I can
use
>marginals or under water plants. My biggest problem is string algae.
>It even grows on the end of the spring pipes, so the spring water has
a
>fair amount of nutrients in it. What are my best choices? Zone 6.
jammer
May 6th 04, 12:11 AM
Primrose and parrot feather.
On Wed, 05 May 2004 12:11:50 GMT, "Stephen M. Henning"
> wrote:
>I have a 20,000 gallon pond (17'x47'x2'-4') with just minnows, no
Koi.
>I put my filter plants directly in the pond rather than in a special
>veggie filter. My pond is spring fed, so I need fairly aggressive
>filter plants. The pond has stone wall sides (old swimming pool) but
I
>have greenhouse benches under the water around the outside so I can
use
>marginals or under water plants. My biggest problem is string algae.
>It even grows on the end of the spring pipes, so the spring water has
a
>fair amount of nutrients in it. What are my best choices? Zone 6.
~ jan JJsPond.us
May 7th 04, 03:23 PM
I highly recommend the iris as you can plant it in a container with just
big rocks and use those new Throw Tabs in the pots. No soil to content with
and easy dividing. Roots right in contact with water. I put mine in the koi
ponds fall thru blooming, remove them to a kiddy pool and add my tropicals
like cannas, callas & taros for summer. ~ jan
>On Wed, 05 May 2004 12:11:50 GMT, "Stephen M. Henning" > wrote:
>I have a 20,000 gallon pond (17'x47'x2'-4') with just minnows, no Koi.
>I put my filter plants directly in the pond rather than in a special
>veggie filter. My pond is spring fed, so I need fairly aggressive
>filter plants. The pond has stone wall sides (old swimming pool) but I
>have greenhouse benches under the water around the outside so I can use
>marginals or under water plants. My biggest problem is string algae.
>It even grows on the end of the spring pipes, so the spring water has a
>fair amount of nutrients in it. What are my best choices? Zone 6.
(Do you know where your water quality is?)
~ jan JJsPond.us
May 7th 04, 03:23 PM
I highly recommend the iris as you can plant it in a container with just
big rocks and use those new Throw Tabs in the pots. No soil to content with
and easy dividing. Roots right in contact with water. I put mine in the koi
ponds fall thru blooming, remove them to a kiddy pool and add my tropicals
like cannas, callas & taros for summer. ~ jan
>On Wed, 05 May 2004 12:11:50 GMT, "Stephen M. Henning" > wrote:
>I have a 20,000 gallon pond (17'x47'x2'-4') with just minnows, no Koi.
>I put my filter plants directly in the pond rather than in a special
>veggie filter. My pond is spring fed, so I need fairly aggressive
>filter plants. The pond has stone wall sides (old swimming pool) but I
>have greenhouse benches under the water around the outside so I can use
>marginals or under water plants. My biggest problem is string algae.
>It even grows on the end of the spring pipes, so the spring water has a
>fair amount of nutrients in it. What are my best choices? Zone 6.
(Do you know where your water quality is?)
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