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mack
May 21st 05, 02:33 PM
Can anyone tell me if the one's operated by mains water pressure are any
good. i.e. Do the job of clearing out the accumulation of muck and leaves. I
am in the U.K. and these are on offer for £23.49 pp. I would be grateful for
any views on these.
Thank you.
Mack

Cleo
October 25th 05, 11:47 PM
"mack" > wrote in message
...
> Can anyone tell me if the one's operated by mains water pressure are any
> good. i.e. Do the job of clearing out the accumulation of muck and leaves.
> I am in the U.K. and these are on offer for £23.49 pp. I would be grateful
> for any views on these.
> Thank you.
> Mack

IMHO, they are a waste of time. I have very high water pressure and found
that they pick up the leaves OK but not the muck. And keep in mind that
while you are using it, it's adding water to your pond. I use a wet-vac now
instead.

~ Gary

Linnette Armes
February 23rd 06, 03:27 AM
"Cleo" > wrote in message
...
> "mack" > wrote in message
> ...
> > Can anyone tell me if the one's operated by mains water pressure are any
> > good. i.e. Do the job of clearing out the accumulation of muck and
leaves.
> > I am in the U.K. and these are on offer for £23.49 pp. I would be
grateful
> > for any views on these.
> > Thank you.
> > Mack
>
> IMHO, they are a waste of time. I have very high water pressure and found
> that they pick up the leaves OK but not the muck. And keep in mind that
> while you are using it, it's adding water to your pond. I use a wet-vac
now
> instead.
>
> ~ Gary
>
> I have a very basic hand operated pond vac that works just fine. It does
remove water at the same time but that goes onto the garden so nothing is
wasted. A change of about a third of the pond water in the Spring if the
pump has been idle over winter is a good thing anyway.

Linnette

Jeanne
May 29th 06, 05:13 AM
Don't bother with vacuums. They are expensive to buy, expensive to operate,
and waste a lot of water. The pond is balanced with some accumulation of
debris on the bottom for aquatic life, and the koi, as true bottom feeders,
like to root around in it. The debris is healthy. If you have a proper and
sizable filter, it should keep the pond crystal clear with leaves and
decaying grass on the bottom. I have a thirty-foot oval pond with a flat
three-foot bottom covering 1/3 of the pond area. There is a two-foot flat
level where I can walk and I walk it once a year in the fall with a
heavy-duty wire mesh on a long pole and I clean out all the debris. Takes
only a few hours and it is not necessary to get it spotless. The fish are
out of sight in the muddy water for about two days and then dthe water
clears up for the rest of the year. Good luck Linnette.....


"Linnette Armes" > wrote in message
...
>
> "Cleo" > wrote in message
> ...
> > "mack" > wrote in message
> > ...
> > > Can anyone tell me if the one's operated by mains water pressure are
any
> > > good. i.e. Do the job of clearing out the accumulation of muck and
> leaves.
> > > I am in the U.K. and these are on offer for £23.49 pp. I would be
> grateful
> > > for any views on these.
> > > Thank you.
> > > Mack
> >
> > IMHO, they are a waste of time. I have very high water pressure and
found
> > that they pick up the leaves OK but not the muck. And keep in mind that
> > while you are using it, it's adding water to your pond. I use a wet-vac
> now
> > instead.
> >
> > ~ Gary
> >
> > I have a very basic hand operated pond vac that works just fine. It
does
> remove water at the same time but that goes onto the garden so nothing is
> wasted. A change of about a third of the pond water in the Spring if the
> pump has been idle over winter is a good thing anyway.
>
> Linnette
>
>