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How to clean up "brown water"
Hi,
Just joined the group -- looks like a great resource. I have built a pond (my very first) that is about 9ft by 7 ft and 30" deep at places. I have it inhabited by 7 goldfish and 2 koi (all are under 5" right now). I have a waterfall powered by a 1200 gal/hour pump. My skimmer is a "Savio compact skimmerfilter". The skimmer (at least claims) is a skimmer, a biofilter, and UV (optional, of course). After installing it -- I had to wonder about the biofiltering capabilites as the matting quickly got clogged up with "stuff", so I added some lava rock int he compartment that the pump resides. Now, that I have described my pond -- the problem. I have mostly brown water. It doesn't look like alge (at least I don't think so). However adding a clarifier like "crystal lagoon" didn't clear it up. So what is the best way to clear this up? And is there a way to keep the pond clean? Also anyone have comments on the savio? Thanks a lot for the information Nasa |
How to clean up "brown water"
Wecome to the group :~)))
The Savio is a good skimmer, but the 2 pads are not enough for good bio filtration - you need a separate filter for the skimmer to feed to, also I wouldn't put lava rock in the pump compartment as it will eventually clog up and starve your pump burning it out. Even though it is called a "skimmerfilter", it is not really a bio filter. The 2 pads are there to mechanically filter the water before the pump, keeping your pump running free of debris. Any container (I use a 45 gal barrel for a pond close to your size) with filter media in it will work well, then have that feed your waterfall Gale :~) "Nathan A. Smith" wrote in message ... Hi, Just joined the group -- looks like a great resource. I have built a pond (my very first) that is about 9ft by 7 ft and 30" deep at places. I have it inhabited by 7 goldfish and 2 koi (all are under 5" right now). I have a waterfall powered by a 1200 gal/hour pump. My skimmer is a "Savio compact skimmerfilter". The skimmer (at least claims) is a skimmer, a biofilter, and UV (optional, of course). After installing it -- I had to wonder about the biofiltering capabilites as the matting quickly got clogged up with "stuff", so I added some lava rock int he compartment that the pump resides. Now, that I have described my pond -- the problem. I have mostly brown water. It doesn't look like alge (at least I don't think so). However adding a clarifier like "crystal lagoon" didn't clear it up. So what is the best way to clear this up? And is there a way to keep the pond clean? Also anyone have comments on the savio? Thanks a lot for the information Nasa |
How to clean up "brown water"
Add super activated carbon ( same stuff used in home aquariums) to your
waterfall. Patty "Nathan A. Smith" wrote in message ... Hi, Just joined the group -- looks like a great resource. I have built a pond (my very first) that is about 9ft by 7 ft and 30" deep at places. I have it inhabited by 7 goldfish and 2 koi (all are under 5" right now). I have a waterfall powered by a 1200 gal/hour pump. My skimmer is a "Savio compact skimmerfilter". The skimmer (at least claims) is a skimmer, a biofilter, and UV (optional, of course). After installing it -- I had to wonder about the biofiltering capabilites as the matting quickly got clogged up with "stuff", so I added some lava rock int he compartment that the pump resides. Now, that I have described my pond -- the problem. I have mostly brown water. It doesn't look like alge (at least I don't think so). However adding a clarifier like "crystal lagoon" didn't clear it up. So what is the best way to clear this up? And is there a way to keep the pond clean? Also anyone have comments on the savio? Thanks a lot for the information Nasa |
How to clean up "brown water"
"Nathan A. Smith" wrote in message
I have built a pond (my very first) that is about 9ft by 7 ft and 30" deep at places. I have it inhabited by 7 goldfish and 2 koi (all are under 5" right now). I have a waterfall powered by a 1200 gal/hour pump. My skimmer is a "Savio compact skimmerfilter". Also anyone have comments on the savio? I also run a savio skimmer/filter, but with a 3600 gal per hour pump for about the same size pond you discribed (consider you may need a larger pump). We find we need to clean the pads every do or two, but it's easy so we don't mind (might be a problem if we decide to go on vacation however). I also couldn't get the water clear so I finally got one UV lite and now the water is crystal clear. We had a problem at the beginning with frogs getting into the Savio Skimmer (poor design) and being chewed up by the pump, but my husband put hardware cloth over the opening and ran a handtowel through the handle so they can't get in the unit anymore. In the fall when we have leaves we will have to remove the hardware cloth, but for now it works. I wouldn't recommend lava rock in the pump chamber as it makes it very difficut to get to the pump if needed. you can see my Ripplin Waters Pond at... htpp://community.webshots.com/user/aspenjd Sue W Brooksville, FL |
How to clean up "brown water"
"Nathan A. Smith" wrote in message .. .
Also anyone have comments on the savio? Sorry, I forgot to mention I also run a home make bio filter seperate from the Savio, which I clean only once last year. you can see my Ripplin Waters Pond at... http://community.webshots.com/user/aspenjd Sue W Brooksville, FL |
How to clean up "brown water"
On Mon, 26 Jul 2004 08:48:44 -0400, Gale Pearce wrote:
Wecome to the group :~))) Thanks! The Savio is a good skimmer, but the 2 pads are not enough for good bio filtration - you need a separate filter for the skimmer to feed to, also I wouldn't put lava rock in the pump compartment as it will eventually clog up and starve your pump burning it out. Ok, I am confused. When I bought my pump orignally, I was told that placing it in a box full of lava rock would be good to "protect it". So how does lava rock clog up the filter? At worst it would seem that the rock could put some rock dust in the pond.... Nasa Even though it is called a "skimmerfilter", it is not really a bio filter. The 2 pads are there to mechanically filter the water before the pump, keeping your pump running free of debris. Any container (I use a 45 gal barrel for a pond close to your size) with filter media in it will work well, then have that feed your waterfall Gale :~) "Nathan A. Smith" wrote in message ... Hi, Just joined the group -- looks like a great resource. I have built a pond (my very first) that is about 9ft by 7 ft and 30" deep at places. I have it inhabited by 7 goldfish and 2 koi (all are under 5" right now). I have a waterfall powered by a 1200 gal/hour pump. My skimmer is a "Savio compact skimmerfilter". The skimmer (at least claims) is a skimmer, a biofilter, and UV (optional, of course). After installing it -- I had to wonder about the biofiltering capabilites as the matting quickly got clogged up with "stuff", so I added some lava rock int he compartment that the pump resides. Now, that I have described my pond -- the problem. I have mostly brown water. It doesn't look like alge (at least I don't think so). However adding a clarifier like "crystal lagoon" didn't clear it up. So what is the best way to clear this up? And is there a way to keep the pond clean? Also anyone have comments on the savio? Thanks a lot for the information Nasa |
How to clean up "brown water"
also I wouldn't put lava rock in the pump compartment as it will eventually clog up and starve your pump burning it out. Ok, I am confused. When I bought my pump orignally, I was told that placing it in a box full of lava rock would be good to "protect it". So how does lava rock clog up the filter? At worst it would seem that the rock could put some rock dust in the pond.... Hi Nathan Your Savio skimmer is protecting your pump with the coarse filter pads and leaf basket in it - the lava rock isn't needed - BUT if you didn't have the skimmer and just set the pump into the pond, it would clog up with plant debris etc and cause your pump to starve for water, run hot and eventually burning out the bearings. Actually, ( amending my first statement) the lava rock might not hurt anything as the water is already prefiltered mechanically by the basket and pads and IMHO it just isn't needed. I am sure when you bought the pump, they didn't know about the skimmer - they assumed you were putting the pump directly in the pond Gale :~) |
How to clean up "brown water"
On Tue, 27 Jul 2004 10:03:56 -0400, Gale Pearce wrote:
also I wouldn't put lava rock in the pump compartment as it will eventually clog up and starve your pump burning it out. Ok, I am confused. When I bought my pump orignally, I was told that placing it in a box full of lava rock would be good to "protect it". So how does lava rock clog up the filter? At worst it would seem that the rock could put some rock dust in the pond.... Hi Nathan Your Savio skimmer is protecting your pump with the coarse filter pads and leaf basket in it - the lava rock isn't needed - BUT if you didn't have the skimmer and just set the pump into the pond, it would clog up with plant debris etc and cause your pump to starve for water, run hot and eventually burning out the bearings. Actually, ( amending my first statement) the lava rock might not hurt anything as the water is already prefiltered mechanically by the basket and pads and IMHO it just isn't needed. I am sure when you bought the pump, they didn't know about the skimmer - they assumed you were putting the pump directly in the pond Gale :~) Ok cool, I think I got all that. The reason I was looking at placing lava rock into the basin around the pump is to provide a place for "good bacteria" to live. In other words I wanted to create a small bio-filter next to the pump. Since lava rock -- or some other material (like the nylon scrubbers) allow for bacteria to grown on them -- wouldn't this work? Nasa |
How to clean up "brown water"
Nasa wrote The reason I was looking at placing lava rock into the basin around the pump is to provide a place for "good bacteria" to live. In other words I wanted to create a small bio-filter next to the pump. Since lava rock -- or some other material (like the nylon scrubbers) allow for bacteria to grown on them -- wouldn't this work? We did that for several years around our pump. We cleaned it out once a year and really noticed an improved flow rate on the waterfall after the yearly cleaning. Lava rock has lots of little holes in it that tend to get clogged up and are heavy and hard to clean. Last year my DH said to heck with this and put the pump back in its slotted black basket without the lava rock. It was heavy to get out of there and took a lot of hosing off in a wheel barrel to clean it. So back it went into the pond last summer without the lava rock. Early this summer the pump died. Was it old age? it must have been 7+ years old. Or was it the fact that it didn't have the lava rock protecting it? The new pump is back in the pond without lava rock so we'll see next year ;-) Yes, lava rock will provide biological bug activity going on. Any rock with water running over it in the pond will do the same. We have rock in our waterfall, water hyacinths in the upflow stock tank and watercress at the bottom of our waterfall all doing biological filtering duty along with plants in the pond. kathy :-) algae primer http://hometown.aol.com/ka30p/myhomepage/garden.html |
How to clean up "brown water"
PS - You can do the smell test with any filter material to make sure it is
efficient. If it practically knocks you over with 'ew du pond' you've got dead spots and that's not good. If it smells like fresh river water (mine own description from a childhood spend sitting in Deer Crick) then it's working. We've used black vinyl window screening (bought in 24 foot rolls at Lowe's) and had it come out of the filter after a year, covered in loverly muck and no dead spots. kathy :-) algae primer http://hometown.aol.com/ka30p/myhomepage/garden.html |
How to clean up "brown water"
On Wed, 28 Jul 2004 00:23:19 +0000, Ka30P wrote:
PS - You can do the smell test with any filter material to make sure it is efficient. If it practically knocks you over with 'ew du pond' you've got dead spots and that's not good. If it smells like fresh river water (mine own description from a childhood spend sitting in Deer Crick) then it's working. We've used black vinyl window screening (bought in 24 foot rolls at Lowe's) and had it come out of the filter after a year, covered in loverly muck and no dead spots. Cool, That's great to know. Thanks Nasa kathy :-) algae primer http://hometown.aol.com/ka30p/myhomepage/garden.html |
How to clean up "brown water"
you can see my Ripplin Waters Pond at...
http://community.webshots.com/user/aspenjd Sue W Wow, Sue, very nice. I concur with your white lily being Virginia, have a picture on my website of mine. That walking iris is impressive along with your pond. ~ jan See my ponds and filter design: http://users.owt.com/jjspond/ ~Keep 'em Wet!~ Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
How to clean up "brown water"
Hi Nathan - Yes, you have the right idea, and it would work, it just isn't
large enough for the size of pond you have - the denser the media you use, the more surface area you have for "good bacteria" to live on. The only problem with this is, the denser it is, the quicker it plugs up and no longer allows your pond water to pass through it and has to go around it, so you only have the outside surfaces left for your bacteria to biologically filter the water. Sponge has the most surface area, but clogs up in a few days and is hard to rinse - then you have Scotch type scouring pads (which I use) - more porous and easier to clean and will run all season without cleaning if the quantity is large enough - then all the rest (screening, lava rock, pea stone, hair curlers, cut up pop bottles and anything else you can think of that will give you enough surface area to host enough "good bacteria" to "eat" the stuff in your pond water that causes algae bloom and/or cloudy/green water. You can use a smaller container than the 45 gal drum I use, but will probably have to clean it more often, but just remember it takes time for a filter to become biologically active, so you can't clean it too often - the longer it runs between cleanings, the better it works I also try to run my pond volume through my filter/ hour even though I keep reading once every 2 to 4 hours is good Gale :~) The reason I was looking at placing lava rock into the basin around the pump is to provide a place for "good bacteria" to live. In other words I wanted to create a small bio-filter next to the pump. Since lava rock -- or some other material (like the nylon scrubbers) allow for bacteria to grown on them -- wouldn't this work? Nasa |
How to clean up "brown water"
On Tue, 27 Jul 2004 23:28:04 -0400, Gale Pearce wrote:
Hi Nathan - Yes, you have the right idea, and it would work, it just isn't large enough for the size of pond you have - the denser the media you use, the more surface area you have for "good bacteria" to live on. The only problem with this is, the denser it is, the quicker it plugs up and no longer allows your pond water to pass through it and has to go around it, so you only have the outside surfaces left for your bacteria to biologically filter the water. Sponge has the most surface area, but clogs up in a few days and is hard to rinse - then you have Scotch type scouring pads (which I use) - more porous and easier to clean and will run all season without cleaning if the quantity is large enough - then all the rest (screening, lava rock, pea stone, hair curlers, cut up pop bottles and anything else you can think of that will give you enough surface area to host enough "good bacteria" to "eat" the stuff in your pond water that causes algae bloom and/or cloudy/green water. You can use a smaller container than the 45 gal drum I use, but will probably have to clean it more often, but just remember it takes time for a filter to become biologically active, so you can't clean it too often - the longer it runs between cleanings, the better it works I also try to run my pond volume through my filter/ hour even though I keep reading once every 2 to 4 hours is good Gale :~) I turn my water over about 1 an hour as well. As far as the bio material goes -- I am looking at switching out the lava rock for the nylon scrubbers (I am as I am able to collect the scrubbers from my local $1 store!). Nasa |
How to clean up "brown water"
~ jan JJsPond.us wrote in message . ..
you can see my Ripplin Waters Pond at... http://community.webshots.com/user/aspenjd Sue W Wow, Sue, very nice. I concur with your white lily being Virginia, have a picture on my website of mine. That walking iris is impressive along with your pond. ~ jan See my ponds and filter design: http://users.owt.com/jjspond/ ~Keep 'em Wet!~ Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website Thanks Jan, I've always been impressed with your pond information at your site, so your compliment is really appreciated. Had a 24 count of open lily flowers in the pond yesterday, with 6 being the Virginia Whites. All of them are beautiful, I sure love the lilies. If I had more room....I'd plant Lotus.... you can see my Ripplin Waters Pond at... http://community.webshots.com/user/aspenjd Sue W |
How to clean up "brown water"
Thanks Jan, I've always been impressed with your pond information at
your site, so your compliment is really appreciated. blush ah gosh, shucks, thanks. ;o) Had a 24 count of open lily flowers in the pond yesterday, with 6 being the Virginia Whites. That was another thing I was going to ask, what with your amazing multiple blooms.... How are they planted, how often do you feed, how often do you divide and how many rhizomes do you leave in a container when you do divide? (Course I am keeping in mind that your are, if memory serves me, in FL? which does hurt. ;o) ~ jan (Do you know where your water quality is?) |
How to clean up "brown water"
~ jan JJsPond.us wrote in message . ..
Had a 24 count of open lily flowers in the pond yesterday, with 6 being the Virginia Whites. That was another thing I was going to ask, what with your amazing multiple blooms.... How are they planted, how often do you feed, how often do you divide and how many rhizomes do you leave in a container when you do divide? (Course I am keeping in mind that your are, if memory serves me, in FL? which does hurt. ;o) ~ jan Jan, I only divide once in early spring. Lilies are planted in dish pans with a mixture of 1/2 sand and 1/2 topsoil. When they were repotted in spring 2 LARGE Lily fert tabs were added to each basket and only one rhizome was left to grow per pot. I think not over crowding the pots has something to do with the successful rate of flowers. Make seperate pots with the remainder or give them away. Fertilizer tabs should be added every 2-3 months until fall. If you only use the regular size tabs I would add two every month. Yes, Florida sun does help. I put handles of plastic covered heavy wire in an X across each dishpan before planting so I can move them around and lift them out for repotting. They are heavy but it does work. Now if I just had some room for Lotus.... Can I grow a nice lotus in a 20 gallon barrel garden? If so Would it need a pump or just plant it? You can see my "Ripplin Waters" pond at http://community.webshots.com/user/aspenjd Sue W Brooksville, FL |
How to clean up "brown water"
The LOTUS!! My most favorite garden plant.
Of course you can plant a lotus in a 20 gallon container. Just plant it. I would not plant it too deep however. Now that I say that I'm wondering about your FL heat and sun? If you don't doing some research, go to: http://www.victoria-adventure.org The gal's name is Babs Ellinwood and is the PCS for Lotses. Nedra in Missouri http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Pines/4836 http://community.webshots.com/user/nedra118 "Sue Walsh" wrote in message om... ~ jan JJsPond.us wrote in message . .. Had a 24 count of open lily flowers in the pond yesterday, with 6 being the Virginia Whites. That was another thing I was going to ask, what with your amazing multiple blooms.... How are they planted, how often do you feed, how often do you divide and how many rhizomes do you leave in a container when you do divide? (Course I am keeping in mind that your are, if memory serves me, in FL? which does hurt. ;o) ~ jan Jan, I only divide once in early spring. Lilies are planted in dish pans with a mixture of 1/2 sand and 1/2 topsoil. When they were repotted in spring 2 LARGE Lily fert tabs were added to each basket and only one rhizome was left to grow per pot. I think not over crowding the pots has something to do with the successful rate of flowers. Make seperate pots with the remainder or give them away. Fertilizer tabs should be added every 2-3 months until fall. If you only use the regular size tabs I would add two every month. Yes, Florida sun does help. I put handles of plastic covered heavy wire in an X across each dishpan before planting so I can move them around and lift them out for repotting. They are heavy but it does work. Now if I just had some room for Lotus.... Can I grow a nice lotus in a 20 gallon barrel garden? If so Would it need a pump or just plant it? You can see my "Ripplin Waters" pond at http://community.webshots.com/user/aspenjd Sue W Brooksville, FL |
How to clean up "brown water"
(Sue Walsh) wrote:
Yes, Florida sun does help. You & I pretty much follow the same planting styles and care, so that long growing season definitely makes a big difference. Now if I just had some room for Lotus.... Can I grow a nice lotus in a 20 gallon barrel garden? If so Would it need a pump or just plant it? Well, as Nedra mentioned, heat & sun. Whenever I've tried one separate from the pond, they got too over heated. I use a plastic round dish pan/oat pan (for feeding horses their oats) about 20" diameter for the Momo Botan I have. ~ jan (Do you know where your water quality is?) |
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