PDA

View Full Version : Re: Help / Newbie


Bonnie Espenshade
July 25th 03, 03:01 PM
Pete wrote:
> I've got a massive algae problem in my little pond, anyone know a quick and
> easy way to solve this?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Pete
>
>

No, patience and lots of plants and more patience.

--
Bonnie
NJ
http://home.earthlink.net/~maebe43/

Bonnie Espenshade
July 25th 03, 03:01 PM
Pete wrote:
> I've got a massive algae problem in my little pond, anyone know a quick and
> easy way to solve this?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Pete
>
>

No, patience and lots of plants and more patience.

--
Bonnie
NJ
http://home.earthlink.net/~maebe43/

K30a
July 25th 03, 03:29 PM
Algae fighting tips

~ New ponds and spring ponds need time for plants to get established, algae is
quicker at getting going!
~ add LOTS of plants, of any kind, in the pond. Especially underwater plants.
~ Shade is good - provided by lily pads, floating plants or artificial shade
for part of the day.
~ LOW fish stocking (20 gallons per goldfish, 100 per koi) and *not*
overfeeding the fish.
~ building a mechanical filter to screen gunk.
~ build a veggie filter, run water through plants, as easy as floating water
hyacinth in your filter.
~ clean up dead plant matter and screen for falling leaves
in the fall.
~ water movement, occasional water changes of 10%
~ add a sludge consumer, concentrated bacteria.
I use <A HREF="http://united-tech.com">http://united-tech.com</A>
~ building ponds with bottom drains and skimmers.
~ do not use algaecides, they only make lots of suddenly dead algae
and that will feed the next algae bloom.
~ do not worry about algae that grows on things (substrate algae) this is good
for a pond
~ gently remove string algae
~ UV filters - expensive but work on green pea soup water (single cell algae).
~ patience and time ;-)

k30a

K30a
July 25th 03, 03:29 PM
Algae fighting tips

~ New ponds and spring ponds need time for plants to get established, algae is
quicker at getting going!
~ add LOTS of plants, of any kind, in the pond. Especially underwater plants.
~ Shade is good - provided by lily pads, floating plants or artificial shade
for part of the day.
~ LOW fish stocking (20 gallons per goldfish, 100 per koi) and *not*
overfeeding the fish.
~ building a mechanical filter to screen gunk.
~ build a veggie filter, run water through plants, as easy as floating water
hyacinth in your filter.
~ clean up dead plant matter and screen for falling leaves
in the fall.
~ water movement, occasional water changes of 10%
~ add a sludge consumer, concentrated bacteria.
I use <A HREF="http://united-tech.com">http://united-tech.com</A>
~ building ponds with bottom drains and skimmers.
~ do not use algaecides, they only make lots of suddenly dead algae
and that will feed the next algae bloom.
~ do not worry about algae that grows on things (substrate algae) this is good
for a pond
~ gently remove string algae
~ UV filters - expensive but work on green pea soup water (single cell algae).
~ patience and time ;-)

k30a

Anne Lurie
July 25th 03, 11:02 PM
Pete,

Here's the FAQ website for rec.ponds:
http://www.geocities.com/justinm090/faq.html

There may be an answer for you there. So far, my best discovery was that
the algae on the side of a pond are "good" algae, so I don't have to worry
about removing them.

Anne Lurie
Raleigh, NC



"Pete" > wrote in message
...
> I've got a massive algae problem in my little pond, anyone know a quick
and
> easy way to solve this?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Pete
>
>

Anne Lurie
July 25th 03, 11:02 PM
Pete,

Here's the FAQ website for rec.ponds:
http://www.geocities.com/justinm090/faq.html

There may be an answer for you there. So far, my best discovery was that
the algae on the side of a pond are "good" algae, so I don't have to worry
about removing them.

Anne Lurie
Raleigh, NC



"Pete" > wrote in message
...
> I've got a massive algae problem in my little pond, anyone know a quick
and
> easy way to solve this?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Pete
>
>