View Single Post
  #1  
Old August 22nd 05, 07:11 PM
Mike Patterson
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On 22 Aug 2005 02:13:04 -0700, wrote:

Thanks for the replies so far.

It sounds like I can get either the small river rock pebbles or the pea
gravel from the construction section. Which one is better? Is the
pebble smooth surface preferred or gravel rough surface? Anything
related to beneficial bateria here?

Still debating about the sunken pots vs lining the bottom of the barrel
with soil, how thick a layer of soil do I need? Can I use regular
nursery pots instead of the aquatic pots (more holes). It might be
easier to plant with the bottom soil layed out than having about a
gallon pot for each plant, right?

I am thinking of using a regular nursery pot up side down and cutting a
door out for the fish to hide in the shade and also use as a "plant
shelf".

I have trouble locating a dwarf water lily. Can I get a regular water
lily? Where do I look for these because aquarium stores don't sell
floating plants.

I have read about they don't like ripples, the pump valve adjustable
and I am running it for aeration, I could make it very gentle if
needed.

I am in Northern California do you think I can run it during the winter
here? It might get to 32F at the coldest point of the year, but with
the fountain pump I don't think it would freeze.

Thanks again



Some notes:

Larger rocks are easier to remove & replace when cleaning, and they
hold less sludge. I use 1-2-inch river rocks in my barrel pond,
thinking of removing those, too.

If you do the inverted pot with a cutout, run a lighter flame over the
cut edges after making the cut. This will round the edge of the
plastic so the fish won't get cut while passing through.

Water lilies can be found in any nursery that sells pond plants. There
are also native lilies that can be found in local ponds. In addition,
my local Lowes and Home Depot sells them.

I wouldn't put a layer of soil in the bottom for the same reasons soil
isn't used in aquariums. Fish sewage builds up and becomes toxic. Rock
can be rinsed and reused, soil can't.

HTH
Mike


Mike Patterson
Please remove the spamtrap to email me.
"I always wanted to be somebody...I should have been more specific..." - Lily Tomlin