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Alex Woodward
May 8th 04, 10:29 PM
I am a newbie to garden ponds and fish. If I add lights, will they have any
detrimental effect on fish I add when the pond is fully established?

Alex

Mosfunland
May 8th 04, 11:08 PM
I think the underwater light I have seems to give them something to play
in.....in the warm summer months the fish look so coooool. The landscape
lights shimmer off the water. Only detrimental effect I have seen in the one
in my wallet.....<big grin>....since I tend to have friends over more often,
thus the consuming of food and favorite beverages.

Maureen

Alex Woodward
May 9th 04, 12:05 AM
"Mosfunland" > wrote in message
...
> I think the underwater light I have seems to give them something to play
> in.....in the warm summer months the fish look so coooool. The landscape
> lights shimmer off the water. Only detrimental effect I have seen in the
one
> in my wallet.....<big grin>....since I tend to have friends over more
often,
> thus the consuming of food and favorite beverages.
>
> Maureen

Thanks. Assuming I don't add chemicals to the water, how long would you
expect it to take for the pond to be ready for fish (after plants have been
put in)

Alex

Snooze
May 9th 04, 05:38 AM
"Alex Woodward" > wrote in message
...
>
>
> Thanks. Assuming I don't add chemicals to the water, how long would you
> expect it to take for the pond to be ready for fish (after plants have
been
> put in)
>
> Alex
>

Set up the pond, add the water, let it run for a day, then add the plants,
let it run for a day like that, then add a fish or two.

Your initial fish will act as canaries, if there is anything bad in the
pond, if 2 fish die, it's cheaper then losing the entire school. Plus the
first two fish help build up the bacteria level, to the point where it can
handle an entire school's worth of waste.

Sameer

Alex Woodward
May 9th 04, 11:00 PM
"Snooze" > wrote in message
m...
>
> "Alex Woodward" > wrote in message
> ...
> >
> >
> > Thanks. Assuming I don't add chemicals to the water, how long would you
> > expect it to take for the pond to be ready for fish (after plants have
> been
> > put in)
> >
> > Alex
> >
>
> Set up the pond, add the water, let it run for a day, then add the plants,
> let it run for a day like that, then add a fish or two.
>
> Your initial fish will act as canaries, if there is anything bad in the
> pond, if 2 fish die, it's cheaper then losing the entire school. Plus the
> first two fish help build up the bacteria level, to the point where it can
> handle an entire school's worth of waste.
>
> Sameer
>
Seems good advice. I'll do it.

Thanks
Alex.

~ jan JJsPond.us
May 11th 04, 03:16 PM
Alex,

If you plan to have a koi pond, don't put in cheap comet goldfish. Use, at
least, easy to catch fantail goldfish or a couple of cheap koi. After you
get 2 in the pond, put 2 in a quarantine tank. Here's why:
http://www.koivet.com/html/articles/articles_details.php?article_id=195&name=Newest%20Articles

(Could someone put that in a tiny URL if it wraps? It's not wrapped on my
screen. ) ~ jan

See my ponds and filter design:
http://users.owt.com/jjspond/

~Keep 'em Wet!~
Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a
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