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Live sand question
Hi all. This is really a different kind of question that you guys and gals are
probably used to seeing. I've seen a lot about the benefits of live sand in marine aquaria, and of course, have live sand in my tank and in my refugium. My question is what is the feasibility of using live sand in a freshwater garden pond? Has anyone tried this, and if so, what were the results? I understand that live sand in a marine tank is colonized by quite different creatures, but it seems to me that if done right, creating a live sand bed in a garden pond would be very beneficial to freshawater garden ponds. Any comments would be appreciated. |
"George" wrote in message news:FgI_d.81408$r55.66832@attbi_s52... Hi all. This is really a different kind of question that you guys and gals are probably used to seeing. I've seen a lot about the benefits of live sand in marine aquaria, and of course, have live sand in my tank and in my refugium. My question is what is the feasibility of using live sand in a freshwater garden pond? Has anyone tried this, and if so, what were the results? I understand that live sand in a marine tank is colonized by quite different creatures, but it seems to me that if done right, creating a live sand bed in a garden pond would be very beneficial to freshawater garden ponds. Any comments would be appreciated. Well this post got me curious so I did some research on it. This is what I found http://www.athiel.com/lib/lg-fw.html It appears you can use the same technique for freshwater. It appears that you can't use sand for it though. Some sort of "natural" gravel. I would also think that the common bio-wheel or wet-dry filter would have a negating effect on any DSB used in freshwater, since these types of filtration are proven nitrate machines. |
"Chris Gentry" wrote in message news:XDO_d.494$fn3.72@attbi_s01... "George" wrote in message news:FgI_d.81408$r55.66832@attbi_s52... Hi all. This is really a different kind of question that you guys and gals are probably used to seeing. I've seen a lot about the benefits of live sand in marine aquaria, and of course, have live sand in my tank and in my refugium. My question is what is the feasibility of using live sand in a freshwater garden pond? Has anyone tried this, and if so, what were the results? I understand that live sand in a marine tank is colonized by quite different creatures, but it seems to me that if done right, creating a live sand bed in a garden pond would be very beneficial to freshawater garden ponds. Any comments would be appreciated. Well this post got me curious so I did some research on it. This is what I found http://www.athiel.com/lib/lg-fw.html It appears you can use the same technique for freshwater. It appears that you can't use sand for it though. Some sort of "natural" gravel. I would also think that the common bio-wheel or wet-dry filter would have a negating effect on any DSB used in freshwater, since these types of filtration are proven nitrate machines. I completely agree about wet-dry filters, which is why my bioballs have all been cleaned and my grandchildren now play with them. I have been reading about Jaudert plenums, and it seem like it might be the way to go. And you might be right about using gravel instead of sand. The article mentions gravel in the range of 2-3 mm, which it pretty small, so that might work in place of coarse sand. It will definitely be easier to install in a 1,200 gallon pond. Thanks for the link. It helped. |
"George" wrote in message news:JRP_d.83176$r55.40732@attbi_s52... I completely agree about wet-dry filters, which is why my bioballs have all been cleaned and my grandchildren now play with them. I have been reading about Jaudert plenums, and it seem like it might be the way to go. And you might be right about using gravel instead of sand. The article mentions gravel in the range of 2-3 mm, which it pretty small, so that might work in place of coarse sand. It will definitely be easier to install in a 1,200 gallon pond. Thanks for the link. It helped. No Problem, As for the plenums, I run one on my system. I've heard debate on whether or not they can cause the tank to crash. I think a simple remedy for this, and one I've implemented is to put a series of airline tubing inside the plenum, use tees to take the individual pieces and combine them into one access line. Then bury the access line behind some LR. If you ever start having problems with your tank, then you can syphon some water from your plenum and check that. It will tell you whether or not your plenum is causing the problem. If so, syphon some more water off, and the vacuum created will pull more oxygen down into your sand, thus keeping anaerobic bacteria away. This method is described in detail somewhere. I think I learned about it on garf.org but I'm not sure. If I had some more time I would look the link up for you, but I need to get back to what I was doing. -Chris |
I've never had any problems since changing to live sand in a fluidised bed
setup. I made two using 1.25lt PET bottles powered by small powerheads (One a Hagen 301 and the other a Rio 600) for my 40Gal reef tank. The units just stand in the back corners of the tank and have no maintenance problems other than to clean the powerheads now and again. With two I have redundancy inbuilt which came in handy when my older powerhead (5 years at least) died last week. Andy "Chris Gentry" wrote in message news:TLX_d.85516$r55.70906@attbi_s52... "George" wrote in message news:JRP_d.83176$r55.40732@attbi_s52... I completely agree about wet-dry filters, which is why my bioballs have all been cleaned and my grandchildren now play with them. I have been reading about Jaudert plenums, and it seem like it might be the way to go. And you might be right about using gravel instead of sand. The article mentions gravel in the range of 2-3 mm, which it pretty small, so that might work in place of coarse sand. It will definitely be easier to install in a 1,200 gallon pond. Thanks for the link. It helped. No Problem, As for the plenums, I run one on my system. I've heard debate on whether or not they can cause the tank to crash. I think a simple remedy for this, and one I've implemented is to put a series of airline tubing inside the plenum, use tees to take the individual pieces and combine them into one access line. Then bury the access line behind some LR. If you ever start having problems with your tank, then you can syphon some water from your plenum and check that. It will tell you whether or not your plenum is causing the problem. If so, syphon some more water off, and the vacuum created will pull more oxygen down into your sand, thus keeping anaerobic bacteria away. This method is described in detail somewhere. I think I learned about it on garf.org but I'm not sure. If I had some more time I would look the link up for you, but I need to get back to what I was doing. -Chris |
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