View Full Version : cloudy green water
uvdoc
July 9th 05, 10:18 PM
I have cloudy green water I have lots of plants and plenty of circulation
using a tetra bio filter and tetra uv filter but still getting dark to
green water and suggestions on what I can do to clear the water put the uv
filter in last year and it all went away but cant seam to get it clear this
year have done a 60% water change but still no luck Thanks Jim in Virginia.
~ janj JJsPond.us
July 9th 05, 11:10 PM
On Sat, 09 Jul 2005 21:18:38 GMT, "uvdoc" > wrote:
>I have cloudy green water I have lots of plants and plenty of circulation
>using a tetra bio filter and tetra uv filter but still getting dark to
>green water and suggestions on what I can do to clear the water put the uv
>filter in last year and it all went away but cant seam to get it clear this
>year have done a 60% water change but still no luck Thanks Jim in Virginia.
>
Filling out the Sick Fish/Pond form (in the newsgroup) would give us more
of a clue of how to help.
Did you change the UV? How many fish do you have that you didn't last year?
Don't do 60% water changes, that can make it worst. Better is 10% every
other day if you think a large water change is needed. ~ jan
See my ponds and filter design:
www.jjspond.us
~Keep 'em Wet!~
Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a
To e-mail see website
Reel Mckoi
July 10th 05, 01:46 AM
"uvdoc" > wrote in message
. net...
> I have cloudy green water I have lots of plants and plenty of circulation
> using a tetra bio filter and tetra uv filter but still getting dark to
> green water and suggestions on what I can do to clear the water put the uv
> filter in last year and it all went away but cant seam to get it clear
this
> year have done a 60% water change but still no luck Thanks Jim in
Virginia.
=============================
I also have Tetra filters and Tetra UV lights (which I no longer use).
Make sure the sleeve is CLEAN inside the UV unit. Don't touch the bulb with
your fingers. If minerals build up on the sleeve the unit will be useless.
--
McKoi.... the frugal ponder...
EVERYONE: "Please check people's headers for forgeries
before flushing." NAMES ARE BEING FORGED.
My Pond Page http://tinyurl.com/cuq5b
~~~ }<((((o> ~~~ }<{{{{o> ~~~ }<(((((o>
Koitoy
July 14th 05, 08:14 PM
When you think of your pond - think circulation and filtration. As a
rule usually a pond under 1000 gallons needs to be turned over every
hour. A pond over 1000 gallons turned over once at least every two
hours. Consider your pump GPH- and the head (resistance) that your
pump is working against. For example a 3000 GPH pump may only pump
1800 GPH as it pushes water up a 3 ft waterfall and thru 20 feet of
pump. So if your sytems is adaquately circulating, then go to
filtration.
Most people pump all their water thru their filter system at a high
rate (GPH). Most filters don't work well this way. The larger debris
is forced thru the filter material, ground up in to smaller particles,
blows past the filter mats and back in to your pond. Are you using a
Tetra clear choice filter or a pressurized system or both? If you are
using the pressurized sytem then I would recommend a good prefilter
before it to catch the larger debris.
For the Tetra clear choice then I recommend that you split your water
input to that filter, such as using a T fitting then running part to
your filter and the rest to your waterfall. The Tetra clear choice is
an excellent trickle tower if used in that way providing a relatively
cheap, effective biofilter.
Hope this helps. Happy ponding.
--
Koitoy
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