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de-icers
Any opinions on de-icers? Which ones are good ones? Features that are must
haves? I see the Thermo-Pond De-Icer a lot http://www.drsfostersmith.com/produc...N=62728+113087 . Anyone have that one and a review of it? Thanks much, Lydia |
Yeah I had one......it froze into the pond....and was covered by the
snow.....I'll retry a bubbler this year with a much larger aquarium pump....flexible tubing split that year and the temps were so cold everything froze over....the bubbler had been doing its job....that stupid plastic thing was just that....a waste of money. Maureen in Phila. |
"Lydia" wrote in message ... Any opinions on de-icers? Which ones are good ones? Features that are must haves? I see the Thermo-Pond De-Icer a lot http://www.drsfostersmith.com/produc...N=62728+113087 . Anyone have that one and a review of it? Thanks much, Lydia It depends on the zone in which you live, the pond size, and the wattage of the de-icer. The one advertized at the link you provided as only 100 watts, which won't do much good for most average sized ponds. I used the one at the link below last winter, and it worked fine. Although the ad says it is for 50-600 gallon ponds, my pond is 1400 gallons. This one is 1,250 watts, which is over ten times more wattage than the one you are interested in: http://www.improvementscatalog.com/p... pt%5Fid=12130 There are others available as well: http://www.macarthurwatergardens.com...rs/deicers.htm http://www.pondsolutions.com/pond-heaters.htm |
Mosfunland wrote:
Yeah I had one......it froze into the pond....and was covered by the snow.....I'll retry a bubbler this year with a much larger aquarium pump....flexible tubing split that year and the temps were so cold everything froze over....the bubbler had been doing its job....that stupid plastic thing was just that....a waste of money. Maureen in Phila. Same here, it froze into the pond, then got covered with snow. I live in Toronto, our winters are not that bad. Now I use a 1250 watt model, doesn't seem to actually affect the electricity bill any more than the 100 watt one(I think the diff is the 100w is always on, whereas the 1250w is only on for spurts), and the 1250w does a great job. |
"George" wrote in message ... It depends on the zone in which you live, the pond size, and the wattage of the de-icer. The one advertized at the link you provided as only 100 watts, which won't do much good for most average sized ponds. I used the one at the link below last winter, and it worked fine. Although the ad says it is for 50-600 gallon ponds, my pond is 1400 gallons. This one is 1,250 watts, which is over ten times more wattage than the one you are interested in: http://www.improvementscatalog.com/p... pt%5Fid=12130 There are others available as well: http://www.macarthurwatergardens.com...rs/deicers.htm http://www.pondsolutions.com/pond-heaters.htm Thanks all for the replies and the links. My pond is about 400 gallons so not too big and I'm in zone 7. We had ice over the pond last year for about a month, but didn't have anything in it yet so I didn't need anything. Now we have one goldfish that *was* a little inch long, $.07 feeder fish from the pet store. It's about 5 inches long now and while my original intent was to let everything go natural and if he makes it great, if not I won't get anymore fish, I do feel sorry for the thing. So while it'll be spending the winter in the pond, I'd at least like to give it a chance to breathe :). Lydia |
Thanks all for the replies and the links. My pond is about 400 gallons so
not too big and I'm in zone 7. We had ice over the pond last year for about a month, but didn't have anything in it yet so I didn't need anything. Now we have one goldfish that *was* a little inch long, $.07 feeder fish from the pet store. It's about 5 inches long now and while my original intent was to let everything go natural and if he makes it great, if not I won't get anymore fish, I do feel sorry for the thing. So while it'll be spending the winter in the pond, I'd at least like to give it a chance to breathe :). Lydia Zone 7, use an air pump and air stone 6" below the surface, assuming this isn an in-ground pond. ~ jan ~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~ |
"Lydia" wrote in message ... "George" wrote in message ... It depends on the zone in which you live, the pond size, and the wattage of the de-icer. The one advertized at the link you provided as only 100 watts, which won't do much good for most average sized ponds. I used the one at the link below last winter, and it worked fine. Although the ad says it is for 50-600 gallon ponds, my pond is 1400 gallons. This one is 1,250 watts, which is over ten times more wattage than the one you are interested in: http://www.improvementscatalog.com/p... pt%5Fid=12130 There are others available as well: http://www.macarthurwatergardens.com...rs/deicers.htm http://www.pondsolutions.com/pond-heaters.htm Thanks all for the replies and the links. My pond is about 400 gallons so not too big and I'm in zone 7. We had ice over the pond last year for about a month, but didn't have anything in it yet so I didn't need anything. Now we have one goldfish that *was* a little inch long, $.07 feeder fish from the pet store. It's about 5 inches long now and while my original intent was to let everything go natural and if he makes it great, if not I won't get anymore fish, I do feel sorry for the thing. So while it'll be spending the winter in the pond, I'd at least like to give it a chance to breathe :). Lydia lydia, I'm in DE, zone 7 also. We just use an aquarium air pump and weight the end down with a fishing weight and blow air thru it all winter. We have friends who have a marina, and I figured if an air bubler system could protect those expensive boats, it would probably work here too. Then I found out that's one of the ways everyone did it. nanzi |
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