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GdeStOmar September 20th 04 04:49 PM

Electricity
 
I have made a small pond for a turtle. I'm wondering if anyone has a
technique for connecting electricity in the outdoors. I'm concerned
about moisture getting into the connection as I had a problem with an
aquarium filter splattering on a connection and causing a tickling
sensation in my hands when I went in to unplug it.

For now my concern is adding a heater to the pond to get it warm enough
for the winter/nights. I was thinking of just the end of the electric
cord in plastic and taping it sealed. The pond is nothing too elaborate,
just a tub inserted into the ground. I have a filter that I'm working on
connecting to a power socket too.


Ka30P September 20th 04 05:09 PM


Hello GdestOmar,

I'll let the electrical experts answer your question.
We had an electrican handle our outdoor work.
But I do know a GFI (ground fault interrupter) is available at hardware/home
stores.

I do know about keeping turtles outdoors.
Where abouts in the country/world are you located?
We are in SE WA state. Our pond will freeze over for a week at a time. With
small, closed systems like ponds it is important to keep a hole open in the ice
for gas exchange.
Turtles will burmate the winter away given the opportunity. Cold air temps,
cold water temps and they slow down (being cold blooded) and will snooze away
the winter on the bottom of their pond.


kathy :-)
algae primer
http://hometown.aol.com/ka30p/myhomepage/garden.html

Crashj September 20th 04 07:48 PM

On Mon, 20 Sep 2004 15:49:05 GMT, GdeStOmar wrote:

I have made a small pond for a turtle. I'm wondering if anyone has a
technique for connecting electricity in the outdoors.


For now my concern is adding a heater to the pond to get it warm enough
for the winter/nights.


You need professional help. I am not being rude, I hope, it is just
that the answers to your questions are ones that an electrician would
automatically deal with. There are codes and standards for these
things. Electricity is also not really complicated once you understand
that. I will guess you are in the USA? Other nations vary wildly.
If you want an outlet near the pond to connect various devices you
will want a ground fault interrupter circuit. You connect a circuit
from your main breaker box to a circuit run underground to an outlet
box near the pond. The duplex outlet in this box must be a GFI type,
unless the breaker in the main is a GFI breaker. The outlet device is
cheaper.
Often you will see outside outlets with a metal flip over cover. These
are inadequate for our needs. What you want is a clear plastic shield
made for a metal connecting box. This has openings in the bottom for
the cords to come out. It covers the outlet and cord completely. Any
of you who have outdoor receptacles should look into this cover.
If the power lead runs across the yard and underground it needs to be
in metal conduit so you [or the next owner] can't go through it with a
shovel.
There are local codes which must be met or your insurance is void,
hence the warning about needing a professional.
Now about the turtle . . .
"Not a professional electrician, but I know several"
--
Crashj

Derek Broughton September 20th 04 08:46 PM

Crashj wrote:

You need professional help. I am not being rude, I hope, it is just


Not strictly, but I always figure that if you have to ask...

If you want an outlet near the pond to connect various devices you
will want a ground fault interrupter circuit. You connect a circuit
from your main breaker box to a circuit run underground to an outlet
box near the pond. The duplex outlet in this box must be a GFI type,
unless the breaker in the main is a GFI breaker. The outlet device is
cheaper.


The outlet device is cheaper, but it really pays to get the whole outdoor
line protected. If you can run the line from your existing (GFCI-required)
outdoor outlet on the house, then the GFI in the existing outlet will
protect the outlet at your pond. Then you save the expense of the GFI
breaker. btw, if your current outdoor outlet(s) don't have a GFI
receptacle, replace them. It's really cheap insurance.

Often you will see outside outlets with a metal flip over cover. These
are inadequate for our needs. What you want is a clear plastic shield
made for a metal connecting box. This has openings in the bottom for


It's not necessarily clear, nor is it always used on metal. It's called an
"in-service weatherproof receptacle cover".

If the power lead runs across the yard and underground it needs to be
in metal conduit so you [or the next owner] can't go through it with a
shovel.


Again, metal is not necessary. And if you go deep enough, even PVC isn't
necessary. But always use marker tape over cable rated for direct burial
so that a digger will see the tape before cutting the cable.

There are local codes which must be met or your insurance is void,


In locales where it is legal to do this yourself, at the very least, your
utility should have an inspection service to make sure you did it right.

hence the warning about needing a professional.
Now about the turtle . . .
"Not a professional electrician, but I know several"


ditto + I've wired two houses and a pond with the complete approval of the
inspectors.
--
derek

HA HA Budys Here September 20th 04 11:26 PM

From: Crashj


On Mon, 20 Sep 2004 15:49:05 GMT, GdeStOmar wrote:

I have made a small pond for a turtle. I'm wondering if anyone has a
technique for connecting electricity in the outdoors.


For now my concern is adding a heater to the pond to get it warm enough
for the winter/nights.


You need professional help. I am not being rude, I hope, it is just
that the answers to your questions are ones that an electrician would
automatically deal with. There are codes and standards for these
things. Electricity is also not really complicated once you understand
that. I will guess you are in the USA? Other nations vary wildly.
If you want an outlet near the pond to connect various devices you
will want a ground fault interrupter circuit. You connect a circuit
from your main breaker box to a circuit run underground to an outlet
box near the pond. The duplex outlet in this box must be a GFI type,
unless the breaker in the main is a GFI breaker. The outlet device is
cheaper.
Often you will see outside outlets with a metal flip over cover. These
are inadequate for our needs. What you want is a clear plastic shield
made for a metal connecting box. This has openings in the bottom for
the cords to come out. It covers the outlet and cord completely. Any
of you who have outdoor receptacles should look into this cover.


This plastic cover is called a "code keeper" and is now required on all outdoor
outlets exposed to the weather. Exposed to the weather means, not in a
sheltered area like in the ceiling of a porch 4' behind the roof gutter. Any
chance or possibility of the outlet getting wet is exposed and needs this
cover.

If the power lead runs across the yard and underground it needs to be
in metal conduit so you [or the next owner] can't go through it with a
shovel.


If the metal conduit is ridgid pipe, it can be 6" in the ground. If it's
plastic pipe or type UF cable it has to be 12" in the ground.

The outlet must be located within 20', but no closer than 10' of the water's
edge. This is covered under the pools, ponds and ornamental fountains code,
however,, except for pools I've never seen the 10-20' location scrutinized.


There are local codes which must be met or your insurance is void,
hence the warning about needing a professional.
Now about the turtle . . .
"Not a professional electrician, but I know several"
--
Crashj



GdeStOmar September 21st 04 04:23 PM

Ka30P wrote:

Hello GdestOmar,

I'll let the electrical experts answer your question.
We had an electrican handle our outdoor work.
But I do know a GFI (ground fault interrupter) is available at hardware/home
stores.

I do know about keeping turtles outdoors.
Where abouts in the country/world are you located?
We are in SE WA state. Our pond will freeze over for a week at a time. With
small, closed systems like ponds it is important to keep a hole open in the ice
for gas exchange.
Turtles will burmate the winter away given the opportunity. Cold air temps,
cold water temps and they slow down (being cold blooded) and will snooze away
the winter on the bottom of their pond.

kathy :-)
algae primer
http://hometown.aol.com/ka30p/myhomepage/garden.html


I am in Los Angeles. Yep, I think turtles sleep about as much as cats. My turtle
ran away in June and I found him in September snoozing in a batch of homemade
recycled mulch. If it didn't get cold nights, I would just leave the pond alone
AND since it isn't my property and I know nothing about electricity, I may forget
the heater idea… try to accommodate the turtle with a slumber section where it can
bury itself again and sleep the winter off.

Thanks for the insight Kathy.


Crashj September 22nd 04 12:44 AM

On Mon, 20 Sep 2004 16:46:25 -0300, Derek Broughton
wrote:
Crashj wrote:
You need professional help. I am not being rude, I hope, it is just


Not strictly, but I always figure that if you have to ask...


hence the warning about needing a professional.
Now about the turtle . . .
"Not a professional electrician, but I know several"


ditto + I've wired two houses and a pond with the complete approval of the
inspectors.


You certainly have established your bona fides with me.

--
Crashj

Crashj September 22nd 04 01:01 AM

On 20 Sep 2004 22:26:14 GMT, (HA HA Budys Here)
wrote:
From: Crashj
On Mon, 20 Sep 2004 15:49:05 GMT, GdeStOmar wrote:
I have made a small pond for a turtle. I'm wondering if anyone has a
technique for connecting electricity in the outdoors.


You need professional help. I am not being rude, I hope, it is just
that the answers to your questions are ones that an electrician would
automatically deal with. There are codes and standards for these
things.


This plastic cover is called a "code keeper" and is now required on all outdoor
outlets exposed to the weather.


If the metal conduit is ridgid pipe, it can be 6" in the ground. If it's
plastic pipe or type UF cable it has to be 12" in the ground.

The outlet must be located within 20', but no closer than 10' of the water's
edge.


"Not a professional electrician, but I know several"
--
Crashj


And now I have met another one, apparently. Thanks for the details.
BTW, is it "Budy" or "Buddy"? I guess this electrical thing is child's
play to you, eh?
--
Crashj

HA HA Budys Here September 22nd 04 02:07 AM

From: Crashj


On 20 Sep 2004 22:26:14 GMT, (HA HA Budys Here)
wrote:
From: Crashj
On Mon, 20 Sep 2004 15:49:05 GMT, GdeStOmar wrote:
I have made a small pond for a turtle. I'm wondering if anyone has a
technique for connecting electricity in the outdoors.


You need professional help. I am not being rude, I hope, it is just
that the answers to your questions are ones that an electrician would
automatically deal with. There are codes and standards for these
things.


This plastic cover is called a "code keeper" and is now required on all

outdoor
outlets exposed to the weather.


If the metal conduit is ridgid pipe, it can be 6" in the ground. If it's
plastic pipe or type UF cable it has to be 12" in the ground.

The outlet must be located within 20', but no closer than 10' of the water's
edge.


"Not a professional electrician, but I know several"
--
Crashj


And now I have met another one, apparently. Thanks for the details.
BTW, is it "Budy" or "Buddy"? I guess this electrical thing is child's
play to you, eh?
--
Crashj

Budys, actually.

Electricity is my trade. The National electrical code is updated every 3 years,
but outdoor/pool codes are ever-changing, often more than one new ammendment in
the pool articles per year.
Many areas do not adopt the "current" code until more than a year after
publishing, and other jurisdictions re-write the pool article completely to
comply with whatever the authority having local jurisdiction favors.

It just so happens that garden ponds and fountains fall under the pools and
spas articles.

Crashj September 22nd 04 04:39 PM

On 22 Sep 2004 01:07:02 GMT, (HA HA Budys Here)
wrote:

From: Crashj


BTW, is it "Budy" or "Buddy"? I guess this electrical thing is child's
play to you, eh?


Budys, actually.


Well, then the "child's play" remark made no sense at all to anyone?
--
Crashj

~ jan JJsPond.us September 22nd 04 10:22 PM

On Wed, 22 Sep 2004 15:39:50 GMT, Crashj wrote:

Well, then the "child's play" remark made no sense at all to anyone?


Crash, somedays you make no sense at all, be we still love ya. ;o)
~ jan
~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~

HA HA Budys Here September 22nd 04 11:47 PM

huh?

Anne Lurie September 23rd 04 01:22 AM

I'm jumping into this thread a bit late, but......

For any electrical connection/plug outdoors, ground fault interruptor (GFI)
is probably mandatory!

Also, I think you should be especially aware of this because you mention
that the pond is not your own property.

Lastly, I don't know whether turtles sleep more than cats, but they can't
look as cute! After all, do we see turtles lying on their backs with a leg
over their eyes looking "just so darned cute we have to run get the camera"?

Good luck!

Anne Lurie
Raleigh, NC



"GdeStOmar" wrote in message
...
I have made a small pond for a turtle. I'm wondering if anyone has a
technique for connecting electricity in the outdoors. I'm concerned
about moisture getting into the connection as I had a problem with an
aquarium filter splattering on a connection and causing a tickling
sensation in my hands when I went in to unplug it.

For now my concern is adding a heater to the pond to get it warm enough
for the winter/nights. I was thinking of just the end of the electric
cord in plastic and taping it sealed. The pond is nothing too elaborate,
just a tub inserted into the ground. I have a filter that I'm working on
connecting to a power socket too.




Crashj September 23rd 04 04:27 AM

(HA HA Budys Here) wrote in message ...
huh?


Stick with me here . . .
Your tag name is HA HA Budys Here
I parsed that as Ha, ha, Buddy's here!
Buddy is an alternative name for Chucky, in some movies. Your name is
similar to some of the words spoken by Chucky.
The movie [series] is "Child's Play"
Part V is due anytime now.
Now, YOU may not have been able to do that, but it is not uncommon to
see that level of complexity on the internet.
Frinstance, I know a truck driver of forboding appearance known as
"Haul Maul." It's a Star Wars thing.
--
Crashj

HA HA Budys Here September 23rd 04 10:22 PM

From: (Crashj)
Date: 9/22/2004 11:2



(HA HA Budys Here) wrote in message
...
huh?


Stick with me here . . .
Your tag name is HA HA Budys Here
I parsed that as Ha, ha, Buddy's here!
Buddy is an alternative name for Chucky, in some movies. Your name is
similar to some of the words spoken by Chucky.
The movie [series] is "Child's Play"
Part V is due anytime now.
Now, YOU may not have been able to do that, but it is not uncommon to
see that level of complexity on the internet.
Frinstance, I know a truck driver of forboding appearance known as
"Haul Maul." It's a Star Wars thing.
--
Crashj


Ok. It was just a tad too vague for me.

tim chandler September 27th 04 12:59 AM

Since the average low temperature in Los Angeles winter nights is about
47-48 degrees, and the average high temp during the winter days is low to
mid 60's, I don't think you should even worry about a heater unless you have
some exotic species that need tropical temps. A lot of us would almost kill
for winter temps in that range!

Happy Ponding,
Tim


"GdeStOmar" wrote in message
...
I have made a small pond for a turtle. I'm wondering if anyone has a
technique for connecting electricity in the outdoors. I'm concerned
about moisture getting into the connection as I had a problem with an
aquarium filter splattering on a connection and causing a tickling
sensation in my hands when I went in to unplug it.

For now my concern is adding a heater to the pond to get it warm enough
for the winter/nights. I was thinking of just the end of the electric
cord in plastic and taping it sealed. The pond is nothing too elaborate,
just a tub inserted into the ground. I have a filter that I'm working on
connecting to a power socket too.




HA HA Budys Here September 27th 04 01:44 AM

From: "tim chandler"

A lot of us would almost kill
for winter temps in that range!

Happy Ponding,
Tim



Not me. The look of my pond in winter, the depression covered by snow except
for the area around the heater... the larger taller rocks peeking out absorbing
the sunshine, the pale tan dead grasses providing winter shelter, food, and
emergency nest re-building material to the birds who chose to brave out the
winter, is priceless.


tim chandler September 27th 04 02:52 AM

Not me. The look of my pond in winter, the depression covered by snow
except
for the area around the heater... the larger taller rocks peeking out

absorbing
the sunshine, the pale tan dead grasses providing winter shelter, food,

and
emergency nest re-building material to the birds who chose to brave out

the
winter, is priceless.


I agree, there is a stark beauty to winter, and the spring awakening of life
always stirs me, too. I've lived in places where there is virtually no
season change, and I find I miss the changes. As long as they're not too
severe, anyway...




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