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#1
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The gravel installed in my pond is a bit on the large size, ranging in size
from about 1/4 inch to maybe two inches. Is this okay or should it be finer than that? Most of the gravel (if you can call it that) is much larger than an inch. |
#2
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You're opening a can of worms - be prepared for the 'gravel doesn't belong
in your pond' crowd! I think you said in another post that you have an Aquascape Designs system, and they tell you to put in gravel. Anyway, mine is mixed - the first kind is 3/8 to 1/2", and the second is 1 to 2". Sounds about the same as yours. It should be fine. "William Oertell" wrote in message ... The gravel installed in my pond is a bit on the large size, ranging in size from about 1/4 inch to maybe two inches. Is this okay or should it be finer than that? Most of the gravel (if you can call it that) is much larger than an inch. |
#3
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Personally I wouldn't put small gravel in my pond.....but hey that is the
can of worms mentioned. So if I had to add gravel, I would probably use something larger like river rock - stones about 2 inches or so.....so that I could hose the muck down the pond drain every other season or so. Enjoy your new pond. Terry Barber www.pondsimple.com "William Oertell" wrote in message ... The gravel installed in my pond is a bit on the large size, ranging in size from about 1/4 inch to maybe two inches. Is this okay or should it be finer than that? Most of the gravel (if you can call it that) is much larger than an inch. |
#4
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Gravel should be as small as possible. The bigger the gravel the bigger the
gaps between. The gaps between will capture waste and hold it. In some instances it'll go anaerobic on you. The best would be the smallest aquarium gravel you can find (not sand). That'd probably cost you a fortune so I'd just pick up some pea gravel from Home Depot. Sam "William Oertell" wrote in message ... The gravel installed in my pond is a bit on the large size, ranging in size from about 1/4 inch to maybe two inches. Is this okay or should it be finer than that? Most of the gravel (if you can call it that) is much larger than an inch. |
#5
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![]() If I were to do rocks I would use the larger ones and use pea gravel for planting pockets. And I would have a skimmer, a more stream like design and plans for yearly cleaning. Rocks are pretty but not if you can't see them ;-) ka30p http://www.geocities.com/watergarden...dors/home.html |
#6
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*Keeping with the can of worms theme*
I'd say, go with small gravel, so that when it gets full of muck, anaerobic bacteria and aeromonas.... It is easier to suck out with a shop vac. ;o) One thing locally we found regarding the AS system. When you remove all the rock (that the prof. builders here put in) you don't have to build bigger, all of a sudden the room for the fish doubles in size. One man removed his rock (all of which he had to pay for by the pound) to find his (AS reccommended) depth of 18" to 24" was 4 feet deep! ~ jan See my ponds thru the seasons and/or my filter design: http://users.owt.com/jjspond/ ~Keep 'em Defrosted~ Tri-Cities, WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
#7
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Thanks, all, for the input. I think I'll add some smaller sized gravel but
not too small. Just seems like the stuff in there right now is too course. Then we can use some smaller gravel for plants. "Sam Hopkins" wrote in message .. . Gravel should be as small as possible. The bigger the gravel the bigger the gaps between. The gaps between will capture waste and hold it. In some instances it'll go anaerobic on you. The best would be the smallest aquarium gravel you can find (not sand). That'd probably cost you a fortune so I'd just pick up some pea gravel from Home Depot. Sam "William Oertell" wrote in message ... The gravel installed in my pond is a bit on the large size, ranging in size from about 1/4 inch to maybe two inches. Is this okay or should it be finer than that? Most of the gravel (if you can call it that) is much larger than an inch. |
#8
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put the plants in containers .. dont plant on the bottom.
"William Oertell" wrote: Thanks, all, for the input. I think I'll add some smaller sized gravel but not too small. Just seems like the stuff in there right now is too course. Then we can use some smaller gravel for plants. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
#9
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We are installers for the AS system. We generally use a mixture of "Canadian
Blue" gravel. This is a granite gravel that ranges in size from 3/4" up to 2". Our experience with other gravels has led to using this size as a standard. The mixture will help "lock" everything together. Many people complain that each spring the pond awakens to an avalanche of gravel that has all accumulated at the bottom. We plant all of our plants directly in the gravel. We have never had a problem using this system in 7 years of business. As for the "muck"... If you have a well balanced system with added beneficial bacteria, true biological and mechanical filtration and the right amounts of fish and plants- the muck will not be an issue. We drain and clean most of our ponds each spring. The gravel ponds have very little muck in them. We simply pump them dry, rinse or pressure wash, then pump out again and refill. The bare liner ponds we service are full of muck every spring! The gravel will act as a bed for the bacteria to colonize on therefore consuming most of the "muck". We have used smaller 1/4" to 1/2" gravel in past with no luck. It seems that the larger mix of sizes allows for more oxygen to get into the cracks and help the bacteria work. The smaller gravel acted as saran wrap and therefore provided ideal situations for anaerobic bacteria (not good). Keep in mind that these facts are only from OUR EXPERIENCE, not from book methods or scientific studies. My advice is to value everyone's opinions in here as they will all have valid points to learn from. I hope it helps. Also, remember that the gravel pond is for the POND hobbyist. Many KOI hobbyists may argue the gravel "can of worms." Read into it and use your best judgement. PS... That "prof installer" that made a 4 foot pond and filled it with 2 feet of gravel should not be called a professional. The AS system requires a very thin layer of gravel and would never instruct them to add 2 feet of it. They should not be called a professional for that job. www.pondscapedesigns.com |
#10
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I guess this leads to the next obvious question, what plants can or cannot
be planted directly in the pond gravel? I know invasive plants should be kept in their containers. We have a papaya that's kept in its container. We're told that it would quickly overtake the pond if left to grow outside its container. Water hyacinth, too. Someone here (sorry, don't remember who) said water lilies can be grown directly in the gravel, and I don't think they're invasive. Anything else? "PondScape1" wrote in message ... We are installers for the AS system. We generally use a mixture of "Canadian Blue" gravel. This is a granite gravel that ranges in size from 3/4" up to 2". Our experience with other gravels has led to using this size as a standard. The mixture will help "lock" everything together. Many people complain that each spring the pond awakens to an avalanche of gravel that has all accumulated at the bottom. We plant all of our plants directly in the gravel. We have never had a problem using this system in 7 years of business. As for the "muck"... If you have a well balanced system with added beneficial bacteria, true biological and mechanical filtration and the right amounts of fish and plants- the muck will not be an issue. We drain and clean most of our ponds each spring. The gravel ponds have very little muck in them. We simply pump them dry, rinse or pressure wash, then pump out again and refill. The bare liner ponds we service are full of muck every spring! The gravel will act as a bed for the bacteria to colonize on therefore consuming most of the "muck". We have used smaller 1/4" to 1/2" gravel in past with no luck. It seems that the larger mix of sizes allows for more oxygen to get into the cracks and help the bacteria work. The smaller gravel acted as saran wrap and therefore provided ideal situations for anaerobic bacteria (not good). Keep in mind that these facts are only from OUR EXPERIENCE, not from book methods or scientific studies. My advice is to value everyone's opinions in here as they will all have valid points to learn from. I hope it helps. Also, remember that the gravel pond is for the POND hobbyist. Many KOI hobbyists may argue the gravel "can of worms." Read into it and use your best judgement. PS... That "prof installer" that made a 4 foot pond and filled it with 2 feet of gravel should not be called a professional. The AS system requires a very thin layer of gravel and would never instruct them to add 2 feet of it. They should not be called a professional for that job. www.pondscapedesigns.com |
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