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kevinmiddleton
July 23rd 03, 08:30 PM
I have been contacted by Marion, who has a 20 acre pond covered in Lilly
pads, and has been for 4 years.

Each year the pond is getting shallower as a result of the plant
material.

What is the best way of removing them? (organic options preferable..)

Kevin
--
kevinmiddleton
------------------------------------------------------------------------
posted via www.GardenBanter.co.uk

K30a
July 23rd 03, 08:45 PM
That's what ponds do. They fill in.
The pond needs to be dug out.
These are my resources for large ponds.

The following are great resources
for large, natural ponds.
Earth Pond Sourcebook
by Tim Matson
and the newsgroup
misc.rural
and the ask the Pond Boss forum
http://www.pondboss.com/cgibin/ubbcgi/ultimatebb.cgi
and
<A
HREF="http://www.aquaticecosystems.com/aquatic1v1/index.icl">http://www.aq
uaticecosystems.com/aquatic1v1/index.icl</A>
and, very important,
call your county extension agent before digging, find out
if there are any rules and regulations you need to be
aware of. Depending on what you are doing they can be
a lot of help along the way.

good luck!

Kevin wrote << I have been contacted by Marion, who has a 20 acre pond covered
in Lilly
pads, and has been for 4 years.

Each year the pond is getting shallower as a result of the plant
material.

What is the best way of removing them? (organic options preferable..) >>



k30a

K30a
July 23rd 03, 08:45 PM
That's what ponds do. They fill in.
The pond needs to be dug out.
These are my resources for large ponds.

The following are great resources
for large, natural ponds.
Earth Pond Sourcebook
by Tim Matson
and the newsgroup
misc.rural
and the ask the Pond Boss forum
http://www.pondboss.com/cgibin/ubbcgi/ultimatebb.cgi
and
<A
HREF="http://www.aquaticecosystems.com/aquatic1v1/index.icl">http://www.aq
uaticecosystems.com/aquatic1v1/index.icl</A>
and, very important,
call your county extension agent before digging, find out
if there are any rules and regulations you need to be
aware of. Depending on what you are doing they can be
a lot of help along the way.

good luck!

Kevin wrote << I have been contacted by Marion, who has a 20 acre pond covered
in Lilly
pads, and has been for 4 years.

Each year the pond is getting shallower as a result of the plant
material.

What is the best way of removing them? (organic options preferable..) >>



k30a

~ jan JJsPond.us
July 30th 03, 10:23 PM
Would a backhoe be considered organic? ~ jan

>On 23 Jul 2003 19:45:43 GMT, (K30a) wrote:

>That's what ponds do. They fill in.
>The pond needs to be dug out.
>These are my resources for large ponds.
>
>The following are great resources
>for large, natural ponds.
>Earth Pond Sourcebook
>by Tim Matson
>and the newsgroup
>misc.rural
>and the ask the Pond Boss forum
>http://www.pondboss.com/cgibin/ubbcgi/ultimatebb.cgi
>and
><A
>HREF="http://www.aquaticecosystems.com/aquatic1v1/index.icl">http://www.aq
>uaticecosystems.com/aquatic1v1/index.icl</A>
>and, very important,
>call your county extension agent before digging, find out
>if there are any rules and regulations you need to be
>aware of. Depending on what you are doing they can be
>a lot of help along the way.
>
>good luck!
>
>Kevin wrote << I have been contacted by Marion, who has a 20 acre pond covered
>in Lilly
>pads, and has been for 4 years.
>
>Each year the pond is getting shallower as a result of the plant
>material.
>
>What is the best way of removing them? (organic options preferable..) >>
>
>
>
>k30a


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

~Keep 'em Wet!~
Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a
To e-mail see website

K30a
July 30th 03, 10:29 PM
jan wrote <<
Would a backhoe be considered organic? >>

If it results in a pond, heck yes! :-)


k30a
yearly brother website posting
http://www.30acreimaging.com/