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On Thu, 28 Jul 2005 23:11:28 -0400, "kc"
wrote: I've been leafing through my Drs Foste and Smith water gardens supply catalog, and I see a couple things like a pond leaf eater and pond mini vac that work by attaching to a garden hose...has anyone tried these and do they work? I've got about a 1,000 gallon pond and I need to get some leaves off the bottom... Kirsten I have the Muck-Vac model of those. It plugs with leaves, is a nuisance. It is good for just the muck that builds up on the bottom, though. Other brands may handle leaves better. -- Charles Does not play well with others. |
"Charles" wrote in message ... On Thu, 28 Jul 2005 23:11:28 -0400, "kc" wrote: I've been leafing through my Drs Foste and Smith water gardens supply catalog, and I see a couple things like a pond leaf eater and pond mini vac that work by attaching to a garden hose...has anyone tried these and do they work? I've got about a 1,000 gallon pond and I need to get some leaves off the bottom... Kirsten I have the Muck-Vac model of those. It plugs with leaves, is a nuisance. It is good for just the muck that builds up on the bottom, though. Other brands may handle leaves better. ========================== I bought the $50 pump pond vac and wasted my money. Everything clogged it. It was useless. -- McKoi.... the frugal ponder... ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
On Thu, 28 Jul 2005 23:11:28 -0400, "kc" wrote:
I've been leafing through my Drs Foste and Smith water gardens supply catalog, and I see a couple things like a pond leaf eater and pond mini vac that work by attaching to a garden hose...has anyone tried these and do they work? I've got about a 1,000 gallon pond and I need to get some leaves off the bottom... Kirsten If you have a shop vac (wet/dry) pull the paper filter off and try that first. You may be amazed. I was when I first tried it with mine. Now I recommend that over anything else. The garden hose thing, I've got one, as other said, it will clog constantly..... assuming it sucks much off the bottom in the first place. The things with outside netting to catch stuff, can stir up some pretty toxic water. Shop vacs remove all. ~ jan See my ponds and filter design: http://users.owt.com/jjspond/ ~Keep 'em Wet!~ Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
"kc" wrote:
I've been leafing through my Drs Foste and Smith water gardens supply catalog, and I see a couple things like a pond leaf eater and pond mini vac that work by attaching to a garden hose...has anyone tried these and do they work? I've got about a 1,000 gallon pond and I need to get some leaves off the bottom... Kirsten Hey KC, Can you fix the date on your computer (I'm guessing this is the problem). Your posts always seem to be at the top of the list. This subject for example, is dated July 28. Thank you, San Diego Joe 4,000 - 5,000 Gallons. Goldfish, a RES named Colombo and an Oscar. "We need to make a sacrifice to the pond gods, find me a young virgin... oh, and bring something to kill" |
Thanks, all, I will try the shop vac instead--Jan, what brand do you have?
Kirsten "San Diego Joe" wrote in message news:1112206629.8636999f43293b8505e52bfbfc5b54d2@t eranews... "kc" wrote: I've been leafing through my Drs Foste and Smith water gardens supply catalog, and I see a couple things like a pond leaf eater and pond mini vac that work by attaching to a garden hose...has anyone tried these and do they work? I've got about a 1,000 gallon pond and I need to get some leaves off the bottom... Kirsten Hey KC, Can you fix the date on your computer (I'm guessing this is the problem). Your posts always seem to be at the top of the list. This subject for example, is dated July 28. Thank you, San Diego Joe 4,000 - 5,000 Gallons. Goldfish, a RES named Colombo and an Oscar. "We need to make a sacrifice to the pond gods, find me a young virgin... oh, and bring something to kill" |
On Thu, 31 Mar 2005 02:17:14 -0500, "kc" wrote:
Thanks, all, I will try the shop vac instead--Jan, what brand do you have? Kirsten Craftsman (I think) from Sears. Has a 12 gallon capacity drum. ~ jan ~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~ |
We have a hose item from Home Depot. It is on wheels, round, has a large
bag on top and jets that push leaves up into the bag. Works fine. Fine muck goes right thru it. We use our pool leaf bag most of the time as the wheels of the round thing stick on bits of gravel. "kc" wrote in message ... I've been leafing through my Drs Foste and Smith water gardens supply catalog, and I see a couple things like a pond leaf eater and pond mini vac that work by attaching to a garden hose...has anyone tried these and do they work? I've got about a 1,000 gallon pond and I need to get some leaves off the bottom... Kirsten |
The "vacs" that work with water pressure, either hose or pump, are a waste
of time and money. They're cumbersome, messy and the vacuuming takes FOREVER. When I can afford it, I may invest in an electric water vacuum cleaner. Mean-time I use a large extending triangular fish net with fine mesh which does the job far more efficiently than the hose vac. However, it does cause wear on the netting (scraping the bottom). Cost-effective PROVIDED you can get one at the "right" price - Lidl (UK store similar to Walmart) had them a while back at about £3 (versus £20 in the fish store) - and so far it's lasted 2 years and counting. The hose water vac cost me about £28 and is a total waste of dosh, especially as the neoprene O rings perished after 18 months. They are also expensive to replace (if you can source them). My pond is similar to yours ...I've about 800 gallons (Imperial, not US gallons). "kc" wrote in message ... I've been leafing through my Drs Foste and Smith water gardens supply catalog, and I see a couple things like a pond leaf eater and pond mini vac that work by attaching to a garden hose...has anyone tried these and do they work? I've got about a 1,000 gallon pond and I need to get some leaves off the bottom... Kirsten |
Thanks all for your advice, and sorry for the wrong date on my original
post--I was checking dates for a trip I'm taking this summer on my computer's calendar and forget to change it back...if anyone knows if I can fix this after the fact let me know. Kirsten "Yabbadoo" wrote in message ... The "vacs" that work with water pressure, either hose or pump, are a waste of time and money. They're cumbersome, messy and the vacuuming takes FOREVER. When I can afford it, I may invest in an electric water vacuum cleaner. Mean-time I use a large extending triangular fish net with fine mesh which does the job far more efficiently than the hose vac. However, it does cause wear on the netting (scraping the bottom). Cost-effective PROVIDED you can get one at the "right" price - Lidl (UK store similar to Walmart) had them a while back at about £3 (versus £20 in the fish store) - and so far it's lasted 2 years and counting. The hose water vac cost me about £28 and is a total waste of dosh, especially as the neoprene O rings perished after 18 months. They are also expensive to replace (if you can source them). My pond is similar to yours ...I've about 800 gallons (Imperial, not US gallons). "kc" wrote in message ... I've been leafing through my Drs Foste and Smith water gardens supply catalog, and I see a couple things like a pond leaf eater and pond mini vac that work by attaching to a garden hose...has anyone tried these and do they work? I've got about a 1,000 gallon pond and I need to get some leaves off the bottom... Kirsten |
Sorry, no, you can't change a posting date after posting - only the News
Server Administrator could possibly do that, and it's unlikely he would bother with a trivial detail. Come July 29th, it won't be a problem - till then this post thread will remain "top of the list" (immortality of a sort). Do hope it doesn't set a trend. Len. "kc" wrote in message ... Thanks all for your advice, and sorry for the wrong date on my original post--I was checking dates for a trip I'm taking this summer on my computer's calendar and forget to change it back...if anyone knows if I can fix this after the fact let me know. Kirsten "Yabbadoo" wrote in message ... The "vacs" that work with water pressure, either hose or pump, are a waste of time and money. They're cumbersome, messy and the vacuuming takes FOREVER. When I can afford it, I may invest in an electric water vacuum cleaner. Mean-time I use a large extending triangular fish net with fine mesh which does the job far more efficiently than the hose vac. However, it does cause wear on the netting (scraping the bottom). Cost-effective PROVIDED you can get one at the "right" price - Lidl (UK store similar to Walmart) had them a while back at about £3 (versus £20 in the fish store) - and so far it's lasted 2 years and counting. The hose water vac cost me about £28 and is a total waste of dosh, especially as the neoprene O rings perished after 18 months. They are also expensive to replace (if you can source them). My pond is similar to yours ...I've about 800 gallons (Imperial, not US gallons). "kc" wrote in message ... I've been leafing through my Drs Foste and Smith water gardens supply catalog, and I see a couple things like a pond leaf eater and pond mini vac that work by attaching to a garden hose...has anyone tried these and do they work? I've got about a 1,000 gallon pond and I need to get some leaves off the bottom... Kirsten |
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