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heating ponds
we still havent had a hard frost yet so the veggie filter is up and running. but the
temp of the water plummets so early that I been playing around with different ideas to keep the temp up. I turn down the pump to the veggie filter whenever the air temp is lower than 55o. turn it up full when it is warmer. I also bought a 500watt heater from aquatic, may buy the 1000 watt as well. What I want to do is keep the water temp up until Dec. and then let the fish go "dormant" and drop in the heaters again in March so the fish are "down" for only 3 months instead of 6 months. and when the temp comes up in march it STAYS up keeping their immune system working. 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. |
heating ponds
I create a lean-to covered with clear polyethylene, two layers, and a pool
solar cover, that looks like bubble wrap. This allows for some solar heating of the pond, protects it from wind and evaporative cooling, and makes a nice greenhouse for my tropical plants. I use the 1800 watt heaters to try to keep the temperature in at 70 degrees, but during the coldest part of January and February, the temperatures will drop into the low 60's. With these temperatures, I have been able to keep tropical lilies blooming most of the winter, lettuce and hyacinths sustain for next year, and taro grows big. The lean-to by itself will keep the water near 50 degrees most of the winter from the stored ground heat, solar heat, and the lack of evaporation. I don't want my fish to be in the 50-60 range, and if the temperature dropped into the 50's for more than a few days, I would unplug the heaters and let the temperature fall. I agree with Ingrid that heat can be used to keep the temperature up for a while, then allow the fish to go cold, when winter finally gets here, and at the first sign of spring to bring them up quickly. I think this can help control a lot of problems. Without a cover, it takes a tremendous size heater to do anything for the temperature of the pond. Hot pond, cool atmosphere, means fog, which is evaporation, which gives off significant amounts of latent heat cooling the pond. -- RichToyBox http://www.geocities.com/richtoybox/pondintro.html "Theo van Daele" wrote in message ... Ingrid, I just finished plugging in a 2 KW heater system into my pond, and it seems to work very well for my 5000 ish gallons. But personally I don't want to take the risk that with a cold spell the heater can't cope and the temps start to hoover in the 10°C to 15°C (aeromonas alley). So I let it drop to about 9 °C and plan to keep it there all winter until March. Then it's all systems go to get over 15°C ASAP. The big advantage however is keeping my filter system up & running, as I'm 100% convinced that one should not stop filtering a koi pond. The bacteria will survive, they will go dormant or perform at a very very low level, but they will still be there when spring kicks in. I just made a webpage about all this, but it's in Dutch. I'll translate it however, it may (or may not) give you ideas. Cheers, Theo One thing though: I have to recommend some isolation for the pond, as otherwise you will just burn precious money. Even plastic will do, but plastic with "air bubbles" (don't know the name in English) will do much better. schreef in bericht ... we still havent had a hard frost yet so the veggie filter is up and running. but the temp of the water plummets so early that I been playing around with different ideas to keep the temp up. I turn down the pump to the veggie filter whenever the air temp is lower than 55o. turn it up full when it is warmer. I also bought a 500watt heater from aquatic, may buy the 1000 watt as well. What I want to do is keep the water temp up until Dec. and then let the fish go "dormant" and drop in the heaters again in March so the fish are "down" for only 3 months instead of 6 months. and when the temp comes up in march it STAYS up keeping their immune system working. 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. |
heating ponds
I have the deep pond to surface ratio with a small footprint at the surface, only
1600 gallons... and the lean to greenhouse over it as well, but I do think I am going to need the bubble wrap or a second layer right over the water. Evaporation sucks the heat out for sure. This is the weekend I begin moving the tender plants from the veggie filter to the basement under the lights. Then setting up the bucket filter to run in tandem with the leftover veggie filter plants. And trashing the rest. dont know how I will get it all done with all the other work going on in the house! Ingrid "RichToyBox" wrote: I create a lean-to covered with clear polyethylene, two layers, and a pool solar cover, that looks like bubble wrap. This allows for some solar heating of the pond, protects it from wind and evaporative cooling, and makes a nice greenhouse for my tropical plants. I use the 1800 watt heaters to try to keep the temperature in at 70 degrees, but during the coldest part of January and February, the temperatures will drop into the low 60's. With these temperatures, I have been able to keep tropical lilies blooming most of the winter, lettuce and hyacinths sustain for next year, and taro grows big. The lean-to by itself will keep the water near 50 degrees most of the winter from the stored ground heat, solar heat, and the lack of evaporation. I don't want my fish to be in the 50-60 range, and if the temperature dropped into the 50's for more than a few days, I would unplug the heaters and let the temperature fall. I agree with Ingrid that heat can be used to keep the temperature up for a while, then allow the fish to go cold, when winter finally gets here, and at the first sign of spring to bring them up quickly. I think this can help control a lot of problems. Without a cover, it takes a tremendous size heater to do anything for the temperature of the pond. Hot pond, cool atmosphere, means fog, which is evaporation, which gives off significant amounts of latent heat cooling the pond. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 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. |
heating ponds
The big advantage however is keeping my filter system up & running, as I'm
100% convinced that one should not stop filtering a koi pond. The bacteria will survive, they will go dormant or perform at a very very low level, but they will still be there when spring kicks in. In agreement there. I was just reading a short print out regarding this, that the bacteria don't die, they just go dormant. I assume freezing solid might do them in, but with slow circulation they should hang in there. Not sure how I'm going to implement this with my system, but I do plan to keep some of the bio-foam in operation this season some how. I just wished I'd read it earlier as I could have cleaned some of the bio-foam earlier when it was warmer. ~ jan See my ponds thru the seasons and/or my filter design: http://users.owt.com/jjspond/ ~Keep 'em Defrosted~ Tri-Cities, WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
heating ponds
I'm curious about people putting what sounds like pool covers over their
ponds to keep the heat in and prevent evaporative cooling. Here in New England my pond (4-5 foot deep) gets a 1-2 foot layer of solid ice over most of the surface (except where I actively prevent it). So, won't any sort of pond cover just get frozen into the ice eventually? Brian Tarbox "~ jan JJsPond.us" wrote in message ... The big advantage however is keeping my filter system up & running, as I'm 100% convinced that one should not stop filtering a koi pond. The bacteria will survive, they will go dormant or perform at a very very low level, but they will still be there when spring kicks in. In agreement there. I was just reading a short print out regarding this, that the bacteria don't die, they just go dormant. I assume freezing solid might do them in, but with slow circulation they should hang in there. Not sure how I'm going to implement this with my system, but I do plan to keep some of the bio-foam in operation this season some how. I just wished I'd read it earlier as I could have cleaned some of the bio-foam earlier when it was warmer. ~ jan See my ponds thru the seasons and/or my filter design: http://users.owt.com/jjspond/ ~Keep 'em Defrosted~ Tri-Cities, WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
heating ponds
bjt wrote:
I'm curious about people putting what sounds like pool covers over their ponds to keep the heat in and prevent evaporative cooling. Here in New England my pond (4-5 foot deep) gets a 1-2 foot layer of solid ice over most of the surface (except where I actively prevent it). So, won't any sort of pond cover just get frozen into the ice eventually? Brian Tarbox There are others that are more experienced, but this I definitly know: You can not treat the pond like a swimming pool, when it comes to a SOLAR cover. The cover MUST be ABOVE the pond. 1. If you were to float the cover on the surface, there cannot be a proper exchange of O2 and Co2 (Oxygen and Carbon Dioxide.) @. The air space between the cover and the surface provides an extra insulation layer against the transfer of cold to and heat away from the pond. |
heating ponds
The cover needs to be supported above the surface of the water to allow for
the gas exchanges. The dead air above the pond is one type of insulation, the cover acts as a wind break, and a barrier to the exchange of warm air with the cold air outside. The ground temperature, at about 1 or 2 feet below the frost line is a fairly constant temperature in the low to mid 50's. This heat from the ground is transported into the pond and keeps the pond warming. The amount of insulation at the top should be enough to prevent freezing of the pond. Also the cover acts like a greenhouse and allows for some solar heating if it is not covered in snow. If it is covered in snow, then the snow is another good layer of insulation, helping to keep the pond warm. -- RichToyBox http://www.geocities.com/richtoybox/pondintro.html "bjt" wrote in message ... I'm curious about people putting what sounds like pool covers over their ponds to keep the heat in and prevent evaporative cooling. Here in New England my pond (4-5 foot deep) gets a 1-2 foot layer of solid ice over most of the surface (except where I actively prevent it). So, won't any sort of pond cover just get frozen into the ice eventually? Brian Tarbox "~ jan JJsPond.us" wrote in message ... The big advantage however is keeping my filter system up & running, as I'm 100% convinced that one should not stop filtering a koi pond. The bacteria will survive, they will go dormant or perform at a very very low level, but they will still be there when spring kicks in. In agreement there. I was just reading a short print out regarding this, that the bacteria don't die, they just go dormant. I assume freezing solid might do them in, but with slow circulation they should hang in there. Not sure how I'm going to implement this with my system, but I do plan to keep some of the bio-foam in operation this season some how. I just wished I'd read it earlier as I could have cleaned some of the bio-foam earlier when it was warmer. ~ jan See my ponds thru the seasons and/or my filter design: http://users.owt.com/jjspond/ ~Keep 'em Defrosted~ Tri-Cities, WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
heating ponds
pond is holding at 58oF with just the 500 watt heater. tent isnt on yet. but didnt
pull the plants yet either. 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. |
heating ponds
Thank you for the information.
My pond is about 10' by 16' so its not practical for me to build a tent over it..especially as we tend to get multple feet of snow here in New England. In past years I've used surface agiation to keep at least a part of the surface clear of ice but its a pretty unstable solution IMHO. All it take is a pretty brief power outage and everything freezes up. After three years of at least one emergency per winter I'm ready to try something else. I like the idea of some kind of supported cover but not sure if I can pull it off for my size pond. If I use one or more floating heaters to keep air holes, but let the rest of the surface freeze (and then cover with ice), will that ice/snow also act as an insulator for the remaining water? Brian "RichToyBox" wrote in message news:_jTmb.27496$ao4.41175@attbi_s51... The cover needs to be supported above the surface of the water to allow for the gas exchanges. The dead air above the pond is one type of insulation, the cover acts as a wind break, and a barrier to the exchange of warm air with the cold air outside. The ground temperature, at about 1 or 2 feet below the frost line is a fairly constant temperature in the low to mid 50's. This heat from the ground is transported into the pond and keeps the pond warming. The amount of insulation at the top should be enough to prevent freezing of the pond. Also the cover acts like a greenhouse and allows for some solar heating if it is not covered in snow. If it is covered in snow, then the snow is another good layer of insulation, helping to keep the pond warm. -- RichToyBox http://www.geocities.com/richtoybox/pondintro.html "bjt" wrote in message ... I'm curious about people putting what sounds like pool covers over their ponds to keep the heat in and prevent evaporative cooling. Here in New England my pond (4-5 foot deep) gets a 1-2 foot layer of solid ice over most of the surface (except where I actively prevent it). So, won't any sort of pond cover just get frozen into the ice eventually? Brian Tarbox "~ jan JJsPond.us" wrote in message ... The big advantage however is keeping my filter system up & running, as I'm 100% convinced that one should not stop filtering a koi pond. The bacteria will survive, they will go dormant or perform at a very very low level, but they will still be there when spring kicks in. In agreement there. I was just reading a short print out regarding this, that the bacteria don't die, they just go dormant. I assume freezing solid might do them in, but with slow circulation they should hang in there. Not sure how I'm going to implement this with my system, but I do plan to keep some of the bio-foam in operation this season some how. I just wished I'd read it earlier as I could have cleaned some of the bio-foam earlier when it was warmer. ~ jan See my ponds thru the seasons and/or my filter design: http://users.owt.com/jjspond/ ~Keep 'em Defrosted~ Tri-Cities, WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
heating ponds
You could build yourself a floating shelter... similar to a hoop house,
but meant for larger ponds. Check out Greg's. http://www.geocities.com/bickal2000/deicer.htm |
heating ponds
We use to have a ponder who posted from Sweden I believe it was. When his
pond froze over he'd suck out the first 3" or so and have an air space with a dome of ice. Kept the surface from freezing over there after. This probably works great where once it freezes solid it doesn't thaw out till spring. ~ jan On Thu, 30 Oct 2003 22:26:25 -0500, "bjt" wrote: Thank you for the information. My pond is about 10' by 16' so its not practical for me to build a tent over it..especially as we tend to get multple feet of snow here in New England. In past years I've used surface agiation to keep at least a part of the surface clear of ice but its a pretty unstable solution IMHO. All it take is a pretty brief power outage and everything freezes up. After three years of at least one emergency per winter I'm ready to try something else. I like the idea of some kind of supported cover but not sure if I can pull it off for my size pond. If I use one or more floating heaters to keep air holes, but let the rest of the surface freeze (and then cover with ice), will that ice/snow also act as an insulator for the remaining water? Brian "RichToyBox" wrote in message news:_jTmb.27496$ao4.41175@attbi_s51... The cover needs to be supported above the surface of the water to allow for the gas exchanges. The dead air above the pond is one type of insulation, the cover acts as a wind break, and a barrier to the exchange of warm air with the cold air outside. The ground temperature, at about 1 or 2 feet below the frost line is a fairly constant temperature in the low to mid 50's. This heat from the ground is transported into the pond and keeps the pond warming. The amount of insulation at the top should be enough to prevent freezing of the pond. Also the cover acts like a greenhouse and allows for some solar heating if it is not covered in snow. If it is covered in snow, then the snow is another good layer of insulation, helping to keep the pond warm. -- RichToyBox http://www.geocities.com/richtoybox/pondintro.html "bjt" wrote in message ... I'm curious about people putting what sounds like pool covers over their ponds to keep the heat in and prevent evaporative cooling. Here in New England my pond (4-5 foot deep) gets a 1-2 foot layer of solid ice over most of the surface (except where I actively prevent it). So, won't any sort of pond cover just get frozen into the ice eventually? Brian Tarbox "~ jan JJsPond.us" wrote in message ... The big advantage however is keeping my filter system up & running, as I'm 100% convinced that one should not stop filtering a koi pond. The bacteria will survive, they will go dormant or perform at a very very low level, but they will still be there when spring kicks in. In agreement there. I was just reading a short print out regarding this, that the bacteria don't die, they just go dormant. I assume freezing solid might do them in, but with slow circulation they should hang in there. Not sure how I'm going to implement this with my system, but I do plan to keep some of the bio-foam in operation this season some how. I just wished I'd read it earlier as I could have cleaned some of the bio-foam earlier when it was warmer. ~ jan See my ponds thru the seasons and/or my filter design: http://users.owt.com/jjspond/ ~Keep 'em Defrosted~ Tri-Cities, WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website See my ponds thru the seasons and/or my filter design: http://users.owt.com/jjspond/ ~Keep 'em Defrosted~ Tri-Cities, WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
heating ponds
BIG RAIN the last few days... filled up everything. but cold weather finally coming
so went to start hauling the trops out of the veggie filter. the pond water is 60oF! fish are hungry and wanna be fed. this heater is working great. it has kept the temp up well past the usual date I quit feeding. hope to keep temp up until dec 1 and then let temp drop. then turn it back on in march and warm em back up fast. only 3 months of "hibernation" instead of 6!!! 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. |
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