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Swimming pond
I manage a summer camp facility that has a small swimming pond 120' X
240', with a maximum depth of about 10 ft. I calculate this to be about 5 acre feet or about a million and a half gallons. We are located in the San Bernardino Mountains, at about 6000 ft. elevation. We have snow for about 4 or five months, and had a complete, thin ice cover for a few weeks last winter, with some ice along the shoreline for 3 months. I am looking for any suggestions to make the pond more appealing. My predecessor had been using copper sulfate in the spring as an algaecide, and then mechanically removing the floating filament macrophytes that would grow along the shores by the late summer. There is a floating fountain and no emergent plants. Unfortunately our equestrian center is directly upstream of the pond. My current plan is to dig a small (10' X 20 ‘) inlet at the site of greatest runoff entry and plant some sort of hearty emergent plants like tule or sedge. I also want to plant aqautic vegetation along the perimeter of the pond away from the swimming beach. We have a large number of very small fish, which I suspect are mosquito larvae predators, added by the previous maintenance staff. I plan to add some snails and other fish, and feel that whatever biodiversity I can manage should be beneficial to the balance in the pond. I would like some suggestions for plant and animal species for this area as well as any other hints on pond management. This is my first effort at pond management, but as I really enjoy swimming in the pond myself, I have a strong personal interest in its water quality. Thanks Nesdon Booth |
Swimming pond
An excellent resource for what you have planned is: EARTH PONDS SOURCEBOOK by Tim Matson. This book is written for ponds the size you are talking about and the attendant management of them. Sounds like a great facility! kathy :-) |
Swimming pond
An excellent resource for what you have planned is: EARTH PONDS SOURCEBOOK by Tim Matson. This book is written for ponds the size you are talking about and the attendant management of them. Sounds like a great facility! kathy :-) |
Swimming pond
if there is any chance of the horse manure seeping into the pond it wont be very
friendly for fish, and I wonder that it can pass coliform tests for swimming in either. Ingrid (Nesdon) wrote: Unfortunately our equestrian center is directly upstream of 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. |
Swimming pond
if there is any chance of the horse manure seeping into the pond it wont be very
friendly for fish, and I wonder that it can pass coliform tests for swimming in either. Ingrid (Nesdon) wrote: Unfortunately our equestrian center is directly upstream of 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. |
Swimming pond
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Swimming pond
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Swimming pond
if there is any chance of the horse manure seeping into the pond it wont be very
friendly for fish, and I wonder that it can pass coliform tests for swimming in either. Ingrid We are required by the health department to have the water tested weekly, and our results have always been very low: MPN/100ml 2 fecal coliform and the highest total coliform was 50. They said they don't even require retests until we get 250 of fecal, and really don't worry until it gets over 1000, so we seem to be in pretty good shape. The reason I want to dig a bog lagoon is specifically to filter whatever runoff we may get. This is southern california, and we don't get much rain, and what we do get often falls as snow at this elevation and during the season when there are no horses here. My main concern is the eutrophication of the water from this runoff which supports the algae blooms and makes the water "yucky". It drove me crazy that they demanded that I remove all the larger floating plants as they judged them yucky as well, knowing that they were competing eith the algae. I am hoping that if I use larger emergent plants, that the perimeter area where they grow will be judged as not-pond, but more as part of the adjacent field, and therefore non-yucky. Someone mentioned that garter snakes like to live in the rushes (which indeed they do) and my boss became concerned that the kids will then be afraid of the snakes. Someone else mentioned that the bible refers to sedges amd rushes as somehow wicked, and that some people may be uncomfortable with that. So unless its all cement and chlorine, I will never please them all. Thanks for the advice, Nesdon |
Swimming pond
if there is any chance of the horse manure seeping into the pond it wont be very
friendly for fish, and I wonder that it can pass coliform tests for swimming in either. Ingrid We are required by the health department to have the water tested weekly, and our results have always been very low: MPN/100ml 2 fecal coliform and the highest total coliform was 50. They said they don't even require retests until we get 250 of fecal, and really don't worry until it gets over 1000, so we seem to be in pretty good shape. The reason I want to dig a bog lagoon is specifically to filter whatever runoff we may get. This is southern california, and we don't get much rain, and what we do get often falls as snow at this elevation and during the season when there are no horses here. My main concern is the eutrophication of the water from this runoff which supports the algae blooms and makes the water "yucky". It drove me crazy that they demanded that I remove all the larger floating plants as they judged them yucky as well, knowing that they were competing eith the algae. I am hoping that if I use larger emergent plants, that the perimeter area where they grow will be judged as not-pond, but more as part of the adjacent field, and therefore non-yucky. Someone mentioned that garter snakes like to live in the rushes (which indeed they do) and my boss became concerned that the kids will then be afraid of the snakes. Someone else mentioned that the bible refers to sedges amd rushes as somehow wicked, and that some people may be uncomfortable with that. So unless its all cement and chlorine, I will never please them all. Thanks for the advice, Nesdon |
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