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#1
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We have lots of algea and I'm considering a uv clarifier. Any suggestions
on a brand? Aqua and Smart seem to look like good ones. We have a pool that is 15' x 15' x 30". thanks, Jessica |
#2
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Hi Jessica,
I'll let someone answer the brand question as I don't have a uv. But I'll post the algae primer fyi. Algae fighting tips ~ Nutrients for algae are sun, new water, fish waste, fertilized run off, rotting plants, blown in dirt. ~ New ponds and spring ponds need time for plants to get established, algae is quicker at getting going. ~ add plants, of any kind, in the pond. Especially underwater plants. ~ Shade is good - provided by lily pads, floating plants or artificial shade for part of the day. ~ LOW fish stocking (20 gallons per goldfish, 100 per koi after starting with 1,000 gallons) and *not* overfeeding the fish. Too many fish and too much feeding is probably responsible for most pea soup water, followed closely by too much decaying plant matter, sludge and overall gunk in the water. ~ adding a combination mechanical and biological filter to screen gunk and convert fishy ammonia waste. ~ build a veggie filter, to run water through plants, as easy as floating water hyacinth in your filter. ~ clean up dead plant matter and screen for falling leaves in the fall. ~ water movement, occasional water changes of 10% ~ add a sludge consumer, concentrated bacteria. many rec.ponders use A HREF="http://united-tech.com"http://united-tech.com/A ~ building ponds with bottom drains and skimmers. ~ do not use algaecides, they only make lots of suddenly dead algae and that will feed the next algae bloom. ~ do not worry about algae that grows on things (substrate algae) this is good for a pond ~ gently remove string algae ~ UV lights work on suspended algae (green water) - does cost some $$. ~ patience and time ;-) kathy :-) A HREF="http://www.onceuponapond.com/"Once upon a pond/A |
#3
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![]() Update on the sludge eater stuff. Went back to their webpage and found a specific link for it. http://www.united-tech.com/m-aq4u-toc.html kathy :-) A HREF="http://www.onceuponapond.com/"Once upon a pond/A |
#4
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If you are talking about stringy or mossy algae, a UV clarifier will not do
anything for you- it only works for "suspended" algae bloom - a bacteria or sludge eating supplement will help with the first 1, actually both types of algae - a balanced pond with a bio filter large enough for the pond and your fish load does what a UV does and more Gale :~) "Jessica" wrote in message ... We have lots of algea and I'm considering a uv clarifier. Any suggestions on a brand? Aqua and Smart seem to look like good ones. We have a pool that is 15' x 15' x 30". thanks, Jessica |
#5
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Green water or string algae or side soft algae? UV takes care of green
water only. Jim -- ______________________________________________ See our pond at: home.bellsouth.net\p\pwp-jameshurley Check out Jog-A-Thon fundraiser (clears $140+ per child) at: jogathon.net ______________________________________________ "Jessica" wrote in message ... We have lots of algea and I'm considering a uv clarifier. Any suggestions on a brand? Aqua and Smart seem to look like good ones. We have a pool that is 15' x 15' x 30". thanks, Jessica |
#6
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Thanks to all that replied.
It's green water. Like Pea Soup. The pond is 15'x15'x2.5' (about 4000 gallons). We have a homemade bio filter, using lava rocks and mechanical filters. There are a lot of pecan trees around the pond, but it still gets lots of sun. No lilies or plant cover because I've used chemicals to treat the algae in the past and it will kill most aqueous plants. I think a uv filter is worth it, since this happens rapidly and about twice a year we have to drain the pond and vacuum the algae from the bottom. This in the Alabama and the pecan blooms and leaves are difficult to keep out of the water. "Phyllis and Jim Hurley" wrote in message .. . Green water or string algae or side soft algae? UV takes care of green water only. Jim -- ______________________________________________ See our pond at: home.bellsouth.net\p\pwp-jameshurley Check out Jog-A-Thon fundraiser (clears $140+ per child) at: jogathon.net ______________________________________________ "Jessica" wrote in message ... We have lots of algea and I'm considering a uv clarifier. Any suggestions on a brand? Aqua and Smart seem to look like good ones. We have a pool that is 15' x 15' x 30". thanks, Jessica |
#7
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On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 21:18:21 -0600, "Jessica"
wrote: It's green water. Like Pea Soup. The pond is 15'x15'x2.5' (about 4000 gallons). We have a homemade bio filter, using lava rocks and mechanical filters. There are a lot of pecan trees around the pond, but it still gets lots of sun. No lilies or plant cover because I've used chemicals to treat the algae in the past and it will kill most aqueous plants. I think a uv filter is worth it, since this happens rapidly and about twice a year we have to drain the pond and vacuum the algae from the bottom. This in the Alabama and the pecan blooms and leaves are difficult to keep out of the water. Don't know what chemical you might have used for algae, but here is a note I kept from the year I fought string algae: Aluminum Sulfate 2.66 ounces per 1000 gal. (4 oz per 1500 gal.) It's 20 ppm, which is the dose recommended by the USDA. Reduces KH removes, phosphates causes particles to coagulate. This is only a temporary treatment for algae. It clumps the algae, so they die, release their nutrients back into the water, to feed a renewed algae bloom. A permanent solution is to remove the excess nutrients, either by growing lots of plants, or by having a large biofilter, or both. So it's somewhat futile to use alum, unless you have the plants and biofiltration in place. I found a UV light helps and so does Pond-Zyme, or a comparable product to help decay the stuff that drops to the bottom. Regards, Hal |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
any advice appreciated | dennistillis | Reefs | 7 | April 29th 04 09:48 AM |