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new pond
hey all, was wondering what the best way to start a bacteria colony in
our new 4000G pond (also, when can we would be the soonest we could start introducing koi?). we installed a fluid art ultimate system with vortex, uv, bead filtration.. we actually live nearby a rather large lake and wonder if that would be a good place to collect some bacteria to introduce into our pond? if people prefer off the shelf bacteria, which products? thanks |
On 20 Jul 2005 13:36:58 -0700, wrote:
hey all, was wondering what the best way to start a bacteria colony in our new 4000G pond (also, when can we would be the soonest we could start introducing koi?). we installed a fluid art ultimate system with vortex, uv, bead filtration.. we actually live nearby a rather large lake and wonder if that would be a good place to collect some bacteria to introduce into our pond? if people prefer off the shelf bacteria, which products? thanks Bacteria from a lake would be okay, if you could be sure you weren't getting any of the nasties that might also be in the lake. MicrobeLift makes a special product just for bead filters. Bacteria will come on its own. As far as starting koi, please read this: http://tinyurl.com/55kv6 . Do NOT put goldfish in, if you want this to be a koi only pond. Are you planning to have any plants? If so, get as many as you can and get them growing well and consider only putting in small koi, so they are raised with the plants, as plants not salad. ~ jan See my ponds and filter design: www.jjspond.us ~Keep 'em Wet!~ Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
wrote in message oups.com... hey all, was wondering what the best way to start a bacteria colony in our new 4000G pond (also, when can we would be the soonest we could start introducing koi?). we installed a fluid art ultimate system with vortex, uv, bead filtration.. we actually live nearby a rather large lake and wonder if that would be a good place to collect some bacteria to introduce into our pond? if people prefer off the shelf bacteria, which products? thanks I would shy away from introducing bacteria into your pond from a lake simply because you don't know what bacteria you are introducing. You could also introduce parasites. I use aquazyme, which works very well for me. You should wait at least 21 days for the nitrogen cycle to run to completion before introducing critters to your pond. |
On Thu, 21 Jul 2005 00:44:40 GMT, " George" wrote:
I would shy away from introducing bacteria into your pond from a lake simply because you don't know what bacteria you are introducing. You could also introduce parasites. I use aquazyme, which works very well for me. You should wait at least 21 days for the nitrogen cycle to run to completion before introducing critters to your pond. The nitrogen cycle changes with each additional critter. Takes much longer without them for it to cycle, is my understanding. ~ jan ~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~ |
even with the UV sterializer you wouldn't trust lake enzymes?
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"~ janj JJsPond.us" wrote in message ... On Thu, 21 Jul 2005 00:44:40 GMT, " George" wrote: I would shy away from introducing bacteria into your pond from a lake simply because you don't know what bacteria you are introducing. You could also introduce parasites. I use aquazyme, which works very well for me. You should wait at least 21 days for the nitrogen cycle to run to completion before introducing critters to your pond. The nitrogen cycle changes with each additional critter. Takes much longer without them for it to cycle, is my understanding. ~ jan ~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~ Not really. Once the nitrifying bacteria have been established (which takes on the average, about three weeks to a month, the pond should be able to digest nutrients up to the carrying capacity of the system. Only when you overstock the pond should there be a problem with ammonia or nitrites building up. The reason not to include your fish before the nitrifying bacteria have become established is because of the nature of the nitrogen cycle. In a new pond, normally, you would seed it with nutrients which the bacteria can digest. After about three days, you will begin to see ammonia in the water. After a week to ten days, the ammonia levels will peak (and is the time at which any introduced fish would normally start to show ammonia poisoning). After this period, the ammonia levels will begin to drop, indicating the the ammonia-reducing bacteria are taking hold. From about 1 week to 10 days onward, the nitrite levels will begin to rise as the ammonia levels drop until about 14-16 days. At which time the nitrite levels will be at their peak (adding fish at this time can lead to their untimely death). After this, the nitrite levels will drop, and the nitrate levels will start to rise as the nitrite-reducing bacteria become established. Once all nitrite levels have disappeared, then you should only see a low level of nitrate in the water, no nitrite, and no ammonia, indicating that the nitrite reducing bacteria have become established. This usually occurs by day 21, but could take as long as 30 days. At this point is it safe to slowly begin introducing your valuable fish stocks. Of course, you don't want to introduce a large number of them all at once, or it will overwhelm the microbes ability to digest the increased nutrients. I hope this helps. |
wrote in message ups.com... even with the UV sterializer you wouldn't trust lake enzymes? A uv filter will not rid the water of paracites, once they have found a home in pond sediments or on your fish. It only kills them in their free-flowing stage, but by then, they've already become established in your pond. |
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On Thu, 21 Jul 2005 20:49:28 GMT, " George" wrote:
"Derek Boughton" wrote in message Hippo dung. You get Carol and her pet Baboon to crap in your pond. That should do it PLONK! FYI, Derek Boughton didn't post that, you've just filtered a legit though irregular ponding poster.... but than this thread was about filtration. ;) ~ jan ~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~ |
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