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aeration
Okay, I'd better explain the dawn patrol method ;-) BV's beer aside (as in laid back ponding method, which I am in full agreement, though I don't drink, medication forbids...) Anyway. At night the plant life in the pond stops producing oxygen and starts consuming oxygen. One reason why it is important to run fountains, waterfalls, spitters and/or bubblers 24 hours a day. If the pond is not going to support the fish through out the night it will be easily apparent right before sunrise and the fish will be gasping at the surface. I saw this in my frog bog (when it had fish). Azollza had almost completely taken over the pond and so I got up early (it also helps to be a morning person) and the poor fish were gasping at the surface. Now I knew there was no way I was going to get all that azolla out as it was reproducing every two minutes so I put in a minnow trap and removed as many fish as I could catch. Later I removed all the fish from that pond. Interestingly the azolla all died once the air temps reached the joyful week of 105 to 110 we get here in August. The pond is also only about 10 inches deep and so the water was pretty darn warm - another reason not to keep goldfish in there. kathy :-) A HREF="http://www.onceuponapond.com/"Once upon a pond/A |
aeration
Standing water create a thermocline, whereas the lower layer of the water body
is much cooler than the top layer. Since your pond is only 25" deep, and that you have the main pump running, thermocline should not be an issue. I hate to see any water feature with a venturi or an airstone. They're so unnatural. The parts I hate the most about them are that they disturb the water surface and create extreme light ray distortion, making viewing the content of the body of water highly distractive. There is little efficiency in oxygenating the water through airstone. The venturi adds little more to that. The best way to oxygenate the water is to use a Trickle Tower. Water flowing down hugh number of small items creates extreme water surface disruption. This let the water to have massive gas exchange rate, when comparing to airstone or venturi. If you want an application for your small pump, make a small TT to use it. Fill a 5 gallon bucket filled with lava rock. Let that pump feed this TT. This is my only setup I use for my 600 gallons pond. Newbie Bill wrote: Let me try this again. Thanxx to all who have answered so far. All of your suggestions are helpful but they may raise more questions than they answer. Let me revert to 'pump layout 101' questions. My pond is around 800 gallons. It is shaped like a snowman with a smaller 'circle' on top (about 5 ft wide) of a larger one (about 6 1/2 ft). There is very little 'indentation'/restriction between the two circles. The top has an irregular buttom (has a platform in it as the original owner had designed it as mostly a spitter pond) but it is only about 18" deep in the small end and 25" in the larger end. It is a little over 9 feet long. Accordingly it does has a high surface to volume ratio, which I assume helps a little bit in gas exchange. I have a 1600 gal Laguna pump(full open) running from the deeper end to my filter which comes back in over a small shelf of two flat rocks stacked on each other, in the shallow end. This does create minimal splashing, some ripples and bubbles. The small pump in question is in the middle of the larger circle. Surprising to me, the bubbling/rolling from the 200 gph pump actually produces stronger ripples than the 'splash' end (floating food is pushed towards the 'waterfall'). I have a bunch of water lilies around the edge of the deep end which is why I am trying to avoid splashing with the little pump. Even a very small bell fountain effect was splashing the leaves and making visibility poor. It wont be long before the water rolling from the small pump is pretty much the only open surface on the deep end. I have about 8 submerged anarchis. Everything is running well right now but I am particularly concerned about it being so shallow and my first ponding hot Texas summer coming on. It gets full afternoon sun. I have more flow from my big pump than I need. I was planning to build a 'sink filter' as filter #2 and divert some flow to it, as my fish load is very high. Naturally I am not getting a full 1600 gph due to elevation loss, but I think it would be adequate for both. Water parameters are perfect right now, but they are growing right. Now, as a result of your valuable input I am unsure how to proceed. I would very much appreciate your educated guesses. I could divert the large pump and try the venturi idea, and add new pump and filter as/if required later. (Trying to avoid higher electricity usage when possible.) Your input has now started me to consider zonation which I assume is stratification(just read a bit about this). Perhaps? I should divert the large pump for additional airation and just us the small to move lower water some. I hadn't thought it through but to put in an airstone I would need (even if small) an external pump that sucks air and not water right. I am a bit concerned about moving the small pump much deeper since it has no prefilter, just small slits in the case, which seem to plug up within 2-4 weeks just from algae growth, much less pulling sediment. The fountain tube attached (I didnt mention before) put the bottom of the pump about a foot deep and exiting about an inch from the water surface. I suspect if I lower it much more there will be very little rolling water on the surface. I am also wondering if I should be diverting from the large pump directly into the pond just for water movement. or. or. or. Probably there are other permutations which I havent considered. Sorry to be so lengthy but, like I am discovering in ponding, few things have a totally simple straightforward solution when my budget is small and my ambitions are large. Thanks again for all the help. My general naivete was once again in full force when I first started 'building my pond'. I love it, but every time I learn something - which is almost daily - I learn two more things I dont know enough about. I can only begin to imagine the disasters I would have already encountered if I didnt have this group for soooooo much support. Bill Brister - Austin, Texas (for Grubber it's actually Leander) |
aeration
Hi Sean - I appreciate yet another possible suggestion. I generally agree
with what you are saying about disrubting the water, but I guess I have gotten used to what I have now. That is one of the reasons I didnt put the outflow out of the water, because it disrupted it much more. I still will probably get a standby setup of something like the venturi or airstone for future instances when I am treating the pond and extra aeration is suggested. I have tried to read up a little on your trickle tower but perhaps your suggestions will answer quicker. First of all - "natural'. If I am understanding the idea - how do you get a bucket of rocks, sticking up out of your pond to look natural? I have my babbling brook effect pretty much in the middle of the 'deep' end with the thought it will distribute a little better. If the trickle filter is 'hidden' on the side will the aeration dispurse as evenly? or is that a real consideration. I am obviously missing something as well - newbie remember. The few things that I read sounded like a trickle tower is essentially a bio filter. It makes sense if the water is getting oxygen and then immediately falling on the rocks these bio bugs would be well aerated as compared to other methods - but does this actually create more oxygen available to the pond. Lastly? I have tried the "gravel in the milk crate prefilter idea" and even that I found very difficult to pull from the pond. Wouldnt this or any suggestion of filling a 5 pound bucket with pea gravel be very heavy to put in and out of the pond? Thanks for you help! Bill Brister "Sean Dinh" wrote in message ... Standing water create a thermocline, whereas the lower layer of the water body is much cooler than the top layer. Since your pond is only 25" deep, and that you have the main pump running, thermocline should not be an issue. I hate to see any water feature with a venturi or an airstone. They're so unnatural. The parts I hate the most about them are that they disturb the water surface and create extreme light ray distortion, making viewing the content of the body of water highly distractive. There is little efficiency in oxygenating the water through airstone. The venturi adds little more to that. The best way to oxygenate the water is to use a Trickle Tower. Water flowing down hugh number of small items creates extreme water surface disruption. This let the water to have massive gas exchange rate, when comparing to airstone or venturi. If you want an application for your small pump, make a small TT to use it. Fill a 5 gallon bucket filled with lava rock. Let that pump feed this TT. This is my only setup I use for my 600 gallons pond. Newbie Bill wrote: Let me try this again. Thanxx to all who have answered so far. All of your suggestions are helpful but they may raise more questions than they answer. Let me revert to 'pump layout 101' questions. My pond is around 800 gallons. It is shaped like a snowman with a smaller 'circle' on top (about 5 ft wide) of a larger one (about 6 1/2 ft). There is very little 'indentation'/restriction between the two circles. The top has an irregular buttom (has a platform in it as the original owner had designed it as mostly a spitter pond) but it is only about 18" deep in the small end and 25" in the larger end. It is a little over 9 feet long. Accordingly it does has a high surface to volume ratio, which I assume helps a little bit in gas exchange. I have a 1600 gal Laguna pump(full open) running from the deeper end to my filter which comes back in over a small shelf of two flat rocks stacked on each other, in the shallow end. This does create minimal splashing, some ripples and bubbles. The small pump in question is in the middle of the larger circle. Surprising to me, the bubbling/rolling from the 200 gph pump actually produces stronger ripples than the 'splash' end (floating food is pushed towards the 'waterfall'). I have a bunch of water lilies around the edge of the deep end which is why I am trying to avoid splashing with the little pump. Even a very small bell fountain effect was splashing the leaves and making visibility poor. It wont be long before the water rolling from the small pump is pretty much the only open surface on the deep end. I have about 8 submerged anarchis. Everything is running well right now but I am particularly concerned about it being so shallow and my first ponding hot Texas summer coming on. It gets full afternoon sun. I have more flow from my big pump than I need. I was planning to build a 'sink filter' as filter #2 and divert some flow to it, as my fish load is very high. Naturally I am not getting a full 1600 gph due to elevation loss, but I think it would be adequate for both. Water parameters are perfect right now, but they are growing right. Now, as a result of your valuable input I am unsure how to proceed. I would very much appreciate your educated guesses. I could divert the large pump and try the venturi idea, and add new pump and filter as/if required later. (Trying to avoid higher electricity usage when possible.) Your input has now started me to consider zonation which I assume is stratification(just read a bit about this). Perhaps? I should divert the large pump for additional airation and just us the small to move lower water some. I hadn't thought it through but to put in an airstone I would need (even if small) an external pump that sucks air and not water right. I am a bit concerned about moving the small pump much deeper since it has no prefilter, just small slits in the case, which seem to plug up within 2-4 weeks just from algae growth, much less pulling sediment. The fountain tube attached (I didnt mention before) put the bottom of the pump about a foot deep and exiting about an inch from the water surface. I suspect if I lower it much more there will be very little rolling water on the surface. I am also wondering if I should be diverting from the large pump directly into the pond just for water movement. or. or. or. Probably there are other permutations which I havent considered. Sorry to be so lengthy but, like I am discovering in ponding, few things have a totally simple straightforward solution when my budget is small and my ambitions are large. Thanks again for all the help. My general naivete was once again in full force when I first started 'building my pond'. I love it, but every time I learn something - which is almost daily - I learn two more things I dont know enough about. I can only begin to imagine the disasters I would have already encountered if I didnt have this group for soooooo much support. Bill Brister - Austin, Texas (for Grubber it's actually Leander) |
aeration
Just for fun I entered trickle tower into google images and found 58 images listed. http://images.google.com/images?q=tr...1&hl=en&btnG=G oogle+Search I don't have one but they were all the rage on the water gardening magazine forum a couple of years ago. kathy :-) A HREF="http://www.onceuponapond.com/"Once upon a pond/A |
aeration
Bill,
The only problem with waiting for the noise of gasping fish is that you may very quickly be losing your largest fish. The big ones always die first. For the price of a small air pump at Wal-Mart and Ice Cream Container to cover it and a brick to sit the pump on under the Ice Cream container and a length of tubing that puts an airstone in the deepest part of your pond weighted down in some way, you can get a nice rising column of air bubble and water to help you fish through the summer. It is a small price to pay, for a little more insurance. Tom L.L. -------------------------------------------- Newbie Bill wrote: Okay okay - You guys are tooooooooo funny. THANKS - I'm sure I do need to tone it down a bit. Prolly part of my 'problem' is all in all things are going great. I am addressing a 'bug' problem, but in general the pond is great. I have 6-10 lily blooms on any given day. Water cannas about to bloom. Other marginals getting bigger. Numbers good. Seems I did so much and was trying to learn so much at first I just have to look for problems. Heck I have to do something to 'justify' the many hours I'm just sitting around watching the fishies and soaking in the beauty. I probably would be in the top ten at least, in a tan contest. Yes, yes life is good. Of course as mentioned, everytime I learn something I come up with 2 more 'problems'. 1-I don't drink, 2-I most definitely don't get up before dawn. According to BV if drinking improves your ability to hear the fish gasping from afar maybe I could just put a tape recorder out by the pond and see if a sugar rush would help my hearing. Baby monitor? Well - maybe not . Ein prosit, ein prosit zur gemutlichkeit! Now you've learned something. I was an Air Force brat in Germany during high school. I DID drink then;) Bill "Benign Vanilla" wrote in message ... "grubber" wrote in message ... "Ka30P" wrote in message ... The best way to tell if your pond is low on oxygen, the low tech, beer in hand way, is to get up before the sun rises. If your fish are gasping at the surface you need more air in there. If not, they are doing fine. kathy :-) A HREF="http://www.onceuponapond.com/"Once upon a pond/A Getting up before the sun rises and grabbing a beer before heading to the pond may be considered uncouth. To avoid this, stay up all night drinking beer, and when the sun rises, go out and check on the fishies. If they are gasping for air, worry about the aeration after you've slept it off. If they ask for a beer, you have had too many beers to make a decision. Try again tomorrow. I guess I have a problem then, because I usually do this check automatically. If the sound of the fish gasping wakes me up, I know two things. 1) the fish need more aeration, 2) i drank too much and passed out next to the pond. BV. |
aeration
Bill,
this site has pictures for a standard TT design http://koi-uk.co.uk/trickle_tower.htm Adapt it to your 5 gallons bucket. Gas exchange happens at the interface of water and air. The more rocks the water trickle down on, the better the gas exchange would be. This means that the rocks in a TT should only be coated with water, not being submersed. The more surface area the rocks have, the better the gas exchange would be. This is why high surface area bio balls and lava rocks are used in a TT. Set the TT far away somewhere. Hide it if you prefer that way. Run a hose from the spigot at the bottom of the TT to the pond, feed into it either above or below the water. Since your 200 gph pump is weak and has no prefilter, you need to design a prefilter to cope with constant maintenance from pump clogging. Someone recently mentioned clamping the pump between 2 water plant baskets as a prefilter. I used only 1. My 600 gallons pond is in SoCal. It's being aerated by a 180 gph pump feeding a 5 gallons bucket TT. It had no problems during 2 days heat wave last time. Newbie Bill wrote: I have tried to read up a little on your trickle tower but perhaps your suggestions will answer quicker. First of all - "natural'. If I am understanding the idea - how do you get a bucket of rocks, sticking up out of your pond to look natural? I have my babbling brook effect pretty much in the middle of the 'deep' end with the thought it will distribute a little better. If the trickle filter is 'hidden' on the side will the aeration dispurse as evenly? or is that a real consideration. I am obviously missing something as well - newbie remember. The few things that I read sounded like a trickle tower is essentially a bio filter. It makes sense if the water is getting oxygen and then immediately falling on the rocks these bio bugs would be well aerated as compared to other methods - but does this actually create more oxygen available to the pond. Lastly? I have tried the "gravel in the milk crate prefilter idea" and even that I found very difficult to pull from the pond. Wouldnt this or any suggestion of filling a 5 pound bucket with pea gravel be very heavy to put in and out of the pond? Thanks for you help! Bill Brister |
aeration
actually, the smaller the air bubbles coming out of the air stone the larger the over
all surface to volume ratio. which is why airstones can put so much more air into water that just disturbing the surface. now if those bubbles break the surface and rise into the air there is exchange both on the inside and outside of that film of water. an airstone in the water moves a water column up to the top and it flows outwards creating a moving column of water that brings water from the bottom up to the top or vertically. this is much better circulation than a venturi that moves water only horizontally across the surface. pumps should not be put on the bottom of ponds. too much chance of something going wrong and the pond being drained. Ingrid Actually, the air water interface is at least as important, if not more important. The larger the surface area of the air/water interface, the greater the exchange of gases. While an airstone can pump air through the water, it does so in a limited way, since it is only making contact with a small area of water at a time and only influences the immediate area around the airstone. By inducing a current across the surface of the water with a pump located at the bottom of the pond, you will induce more gas exchange because of the greater surface area involved. It also helps in preventing zonation from froming in the water column, since you are pumping the water from the bottom and streaming it across the surface, which in turn, allows oxygenated water to move towards the bottom of the pond. The ripples going across the surface of the pond also looks nice. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
aeration
the greatest risk to fish for low oxygen is
1. pond water is hot, less oxygen dissolves in hot water 2. the pond is full of green algae (well maybe green plants too) 3. big fish (big fish suffer first) 4. poor aeration if you absolutely, positively want to make damn sure there is sufficient oxygen get an aquatic ecosystem whitewater regenerative blower ($179) or their swee****er (around $379) and a foot long air stone for every 1000 gallons. Ingrid ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
aeration
my foot long airstone is right under the waterfall, I have it hanging length ways
(horizontal) so it foams the water as it spills over from the veggie filter. actually I could put the air stone into the veggie filter too. my water lilies are 2-3' away and not disturbed at all. the area where I sit and watch my fish is glass smooth... well except when the buggers see me they go nuts splashing me for food. there is tremendous efficiency in airstones .. Ingrid Sean Dinh wrote: I hate to see any water feature with a venturi or an airstone. They're so unnatural. The parts I hate the most about them are that they disturb the water surface and create extreme light ray distortion, making viewing the content of the body of water highly distractive. There is little efficiency in oxygenating the water through airstone. The venturi adds little more to that. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
aeration
trickle towers are extremely good for people with less than ideal water, especially
those with high CO2, iron or hydrogen sulfide in their well water. Ingrid EROSPAM (Ka30P) wrote: Just for fun I entered trickle tower into google images and found 58 images listed. http://images.google.com/images?q=tr...1&hl=en&btnG=G oogle+Search I don't have one but they were all the rage on the water gardening magazine forum a couple of years ago. kathy :-) A HREF="http://www.onceuponapond.com/"Once upon a pond/A ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
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