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Lowering pH
"Lee Brouillet" wrote in message ...
Sue: Yes, the waterfall adds oxygen to the pond, depending on the drop. If you have a drop of 18" or so, you may be OK. Actually, the waterfall is two tiered from the head pool into the stream with each drop about 9", then it travels the lenght of the stream 22', then it drops into the pond about 12". How big of an airstone are you talking, in the barrel all I had was a walnut sized one. Where do you get bigger ones? What type(size?) of air pump do you need to run the size you are recommending? I'd place the airstone about 2/3 of the way from the waterfall: the airstone will ensure that the far end of the pond also is properly aerated. I have a water spouting crane which leaks so badly that it can't be used. It is at that 2/3 locations that you referred to. I put it there to make sure water moved all around the pond, no dead spots. If I can get it fixed would that do the job for the extra oxygen? Your "brown algae" doesn't "quite" sound normal. New ponds usually grow nice green stuff, not brown stuff. Especially brown stuff that breaks loose and clogs the filter. It's like loose silt, really doesn't look like algae... Do you have any Koi Clay? No, on the Koi Clay. Where do we get it around here? Tampa, Hernando or Pasco county or on the internet? replace your skimmer mat with a lingerie bag stuffed with netting, the kind you use for crafts (like coarse bridal veil). This I can do easily. If you've got what I think you have (cyanobacteria), it will be an on-going effort until the water cools again. It works in cycles; I'm on my third since Spring. cyanobacteria?? I"ll have to look that up as I've never heard of that one, but that's par for the course, remember when I first filled the pond back in January I had red algae. Drained and redug it since then and glad it didn't appear when we refilled in May. Thanks Lee for all the good info...Sue W |
Lowering pH
If you don't have Aquatic Ecosystem's catalog, you NEED it G! I can (and
have!) spend *hours* looking through it. They have a pretty extensive website, but it's a little hard to navigate. However, you can order the catalog from the http://www.aquaticeco.com You can find the airstones, pumps, and more stuff than you ever thought existed! They're over there around Apopka, so even "regular" UPS is "next-day" delivery for us'ns here in FL. Your water-spouting crane would help, but it's not as efficient as the airstone(s). It just *looks* nicer! If I remember during my search for info, there are over 40,000 different species of algae. I think at one time or another, most of them have found their way to my pond (long sigh . . .). And it's very difficult to get rid of: even dumping the pond and scrubbing everything doesn't get rid of it all. It hides in the plants, on your rock work, EVERYwhere. And all it needs is a few pieces to reestablish itself. That brownish, olive-green silty stuff could still be cyanobacteria. It comes in multiple forms, too. BTW, I've never heard of red algae except for the blooms in the Gulf, which are usually deadly. There's a fresh water version of it, too??? Sheesh . . . I've never been able to find Koi Clay locally. No one carries it. But get ahold of Gene Winstead at http://www.koivillage.com and he'll get some out to you. Check out his site (both commercial and personal): he has a lot of info. Lee "Sue Walsh" wrote in message om... "Lee Brouillet" wrote in message ... Sue: Yes, the waterfall adds oxygen to the pond, depending on the drop. If you have a drop of 18" or so, you may be OK. Actually, the waterfall is two tiered from the head pool into the stream with each drop about 9", then it travels the lenght of the stream 22', then it drops into the pond about 12". How big of an airstone are you talking, in the barrel all I had was a walnut sized one. Where do you get bigger ones? What type(size?) of air pump do you need to run the size you are recommending? I'd place the airstone about 2/3 of the way from the waterfall: the airstone will ensure that the far end of the pond also is properly aerated. I have a water spouting crane which leaks so badly that it can't be used. It is at that 2/3 locations that you referred to. I put it there to make sure water moved all around the pond, no dead spots. If I can get it fixed would that do the job for the extra oxygen? Your "brown algae" doesn't "quite" sound normal. New ponds usually grow nice green stuff, not brown stuff. Especially brown stuff that breaks loose and clogs the filter. It's like loose silt, really doesn't look like algae... Do you have any Koi Clay? No, on the Koi Clay. Where do we get it around here? Tampa, Hernando or Pasco county or on the internet? replace your skimmer mat with a lingerie bag stuffed with netting, the kind you use for crafts (like coarse bridal veil). This I can do easily. If you've got what I think you have (cyanobacteria), it will be an on-going effort until the water cools again. It works in cycles; I'm on my third since Spring. cyanobacteria?? I"ll have to look that up as I've never heard of that one, but that's par for the course, remember when I first filled the pond back in January I had red algae. Drained and redug it since then and glad it didn't appear when we refilled in May. Thanks Lee for all the good info...Sue W |
Lowering pH
If you don't have Aquatic Ecosystem's catalog, you NEED it G! I can (and
have!) spend *hours* looking through it. They have a pretty extensive website, but it's a little hard to navigate. However, you can order the catalog from the http://www.aquaticeco.com You can find the airstones, pumps, and more stuff than you ever thought existed! They're over there around Apopka, so even "regular" UPS is "next-day" delivery for us'ns here in FL. Your water-spouting crane would help, but it's not as efficient as the airstone(s). It just *looks* nicer! If I remember during my search for info, there are over 40,000 different species of algae. I think at one time or another, most of them have found their way to my pond (long sigh . . .). And it's very difficult to get rid of: even dumping the pond and scrubbing everything doesn't get rid of it all. It hides in the plants, on your rock work, EVERYwhere. And all it needs is a few pieces to reestablish itself. That brownish, olive-green silty stuff could still be cyanobacteria. It comes in multiple forms, too. BTW, I've never heard of red algae except for the blooms in the Gulf, which are usually deadly. There's a fresh water version of it, too??? Sheesh . . . I've never been able to find Koi Clay locally. No one carries it. But get ahold of Gene Winstead at http://www.koivillage.com and he'll get some out to you. Check out his site (both commercial and personal): he has a lot of info. Lee "Sue Walsh" wrote in message om... "Lee Brouillet" wrote in message ... Sue: Yes, the waterfall adds oxygen to the pond, depending on the drop. If you have a drop of 18" or so, you may be OK. Actually, the waterfall is two tiered from the head pool into the stream with each drop about 9", then it travels the lenght of the stream 22', then it drops into the pond about 12". How big of an airstone are you talking, in the barrel all I had was a walnut sized one. Where do you get bigger ones? What type(size?) of air pump do you need to run the size you are recommending? I'd place the airstone about 2/3 of the way from the waterfall: the airstone will ensure that the far end of the pond also is properly aerated. I have a water spouting crane which leaks so badly that it can't be used. It is at that 2/3 locations that you referred to. I put it there to make sure water moved all around the pond, no dead spots. If I can get it fixed would that do the job for the extra oxygen? Your "brown algae" doesn't "quite" sound normal. New ponds usually grow nice green stuff, not brown stuff. Especially brown stuff that breaks loose and clogs the filter. It's like loose silt, really doesn't look like algae... Do you have any Koi Clay? No, on the Koi Clay. Where do we get it around here? Tampa, Hernando or Pasco county or on the internet? replace your skimmer mat with a lingerie bag stuffed with netting, the kind you use for crafts (like coarse bridal veil). This I can do easily. If you've got what I think you have (cyanobacteria), it will be an on-going effort until the water cools again. It works in cycles; I'm on my third since Spring. cyanobacteria?? I"ll have to look that up as I've never heard of that one, but that's par for the course, remember when I first filled the pond back in January I had red algae. Drained and redug it since then and glad it didn't appear when we refilled in May. Thanks Lee for all the good info...Sue W |
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