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Question on removing floating grass
We just bought a house with a beautiful pond filled with a variety of
fish. Trouble is, the previous owner didn't cut the grass, and when the 1 1/2 foot tall grass was mowed, a lot of it went into the pond. It's been three weeks now and I removed about half with this tiny net, but a lot is still there. Any suggestions on how to remove the remaining grass? The pond is between 4 and 8 feet deep. Is there some special lightweight net I could use, or vacuum, or should I just wade in there with someone else and a large net between us (where would you suggest I could get such a net?)? Thanks a lot. Rob |
Question on removing floating grass
Hi Rob,
You could try floading the pond. Adding water slowly. Too much too rapidly could be a temp. shock for your fish. It will move all the grass to the lowest point where you would be able to net it out easier (or at least closer together). If there are fish in the pond you need to add a water treatment for chlorine or chloramines depending on what your city puts in the water. Only replace about 20% of the water with the flooding. kathy :-) algae primer http://hometown.aol.com/ka30p/myhomepage/garden.html |
Question on removing floating grass
"RobH" wrote in message
om... We just bought a house with a beautiful pond filled with a variety of fish. Trouble is, the previous owner didn't cut the grass, and when the 1 1/2 foot tall grass was mowed, a lot of it went into the pond. It's been three weeks now and I removed about half with this tiny net, but a lot is still there. Any suggestions on how to remove the remaining grass? The pond is between 4 and 8 feet deep. Is there some special lightweight net I could use, or vacuum, or should I just wade in there with someone else and a large net between us (where would you suggest I could get such a net?)? Thanks a lot. Rob I have a long-handled, stiff net I bought from Petsmart in their pond section. I've used that for netting all kinds of stuff out of the pond, including grass when my husband used the weed whacker too close to the pond. The handle is (presumably) aluminum, and relatively lightweight. Fish will tend to avoid the net so you should be able to go fairly deep with it, without accidentally netting fish, although probably not 8' deep. There's stuff you can add to the water that's supposed to help clean up decomposing plant matter and the like: PondZymePlus, also available at stores selling pond supplies. Other ponders here recommend another (similar) product but I can't find a reference to it, so maybe someone else will chime in. Gail |
Question on removing floating grass
RobH wrote:
We just bought a house with a beautiful pond filled with a variety of fish. Trouble is, the previous owner didn't cut the grass, and when the 1 1/2 foot tall grass was mowed, a lot of it went into the pond. It's been three weeks now and I removed about half with this tiny net, but a lot is still there. Any suggestions on how to remove the remaining grass? The pond is between 4 and 8 feet deep. Is there some special lightweight net I could use, or vacuum, or should I just wade in there with someone else and a large net between us (where would you suggest I could get such a net?)? Thanks a lot. Rob I use a pool net that I attached to a 16' telescoping aluminum paint roller extension handle. Works great and gives lots of reach. Bob |
Question on removing floating grass
Without seeing your pond, size and living plants within, perhaps a leaf
blower could move all the grass to one end. Or use the blowing end off a shop vac? ~ jan (Do you know where your water quality is?) |
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