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Looking to add some fish



 
 
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  #1  
Old April 9th 04, 07:52 PM
rob.smith4
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Default Looking to add some fish

Hi i was wondering if you could help me I am looking to add some more fish
to my pond at the moment I have comets not had pond that long but would like
to add some new species not koi as my pond is not that deep and I heard you
had to have a decent depth for them,any help appreciated as I have to travel
up to the nearest city to get fish would like your advice before going up in
the morning.
Thanks in advance for any help


  #2  
Old April 9th 04, 08:10 PM
Ka30P
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Posts: n/a
Default Looking to add some fish


Hi Rob,

Can you give us the dimensions of your
pond and a guess as to how many gallons
it is?


kathy :-)
A HREF="http://www.onceuponapond.com/"Once upon a pond/A
  #3  
Old April 9th 04, 08:37 PM
rob.smith4
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Posts: n/a
Default Looking to add some fish


rob.smith4 wrote in message
newshCdc.103$585.99@newsfe1-win...
Hi i was wondering if you could help me I am looking to add some more fish
to my pond at the moment I have comets not had pond that long but would

like
to add some new species not koi as my pond is not that deep and I heard

you
had to have a decent depth for them,any help appreciated as I have to

travel
up to the nearest city to get fish would like your advice before going up

in
the morning.
Thanks in advance for any help

Hi well the pond is 9ft long 2ft wide and the depth on average is 1.5ft

hope this helps not sure about gallons.


  #4  
Old April 10th 04, 03:42 AM
Sean Dinh
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Looking to add some fish

9 x 2 = 18
18 x 1.5 = 27
27 x 7.5 = 202.5 gallons

If I have that same pond, I would put in a couple of Koi. They don't get big as
long as you don't feed them much. Do feed them a bit. What is necessary in this
case is that a Trickle Tower is mandatory. TT add tremendous O2 to the water,
and cool the water at the same time. Without TT, the fish could die if the water
get too warm.

"rob.smith4" wrote:

Hi well the pond is 9ft long 2ft wide and the depth on average is 1.5ft
hope this helps not sure about gallons.


  #5  
Old April 10th 04, 04:46 AM
Nedra
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Looking to add some fish

But Sean ... I think you are kidding when you say you would
put Two koi in a 202.5 gallon pond? As Barbara said:
You will need 1,000 gallons of water for the first koi and
about 100+ gallons of water for any additional koi. The rest
of what she posts is also true for koi ...
You were kidding, right?

Nedra

"Sean Dinh" wrote in message
...
9 x 2 = 18
18 x 1.5 = 27
27 x 7.5 = 202.5 gallons

If I have that same pond, I would put in a couple of Koi. They don't get

big as
long as you don't feed them much. Do feed them a bit. What is necessary in

this
case is that a Trickle Tower is mandatory. TT add tremendous O2 to the

water,
and cool the water at the same time. Without TT, the fish could die if the

water
get too warm.

"rob.smith4" wrote:

Hi well the pond is 9ft long 2ft wide and the depth on average is 1.5ft
hope this helps not sure about gallons.




  #6  
Old April 10th 04, 09:33 PM
Sean Dinh
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Looking to add some fish

Actually, I made a mistake. I forgot to address the region's requirement. In
this case, I don't think it's good for poster to have any fish since his pond
might freeze without other equipment.

As for people in warmer climate like me in Southern California, 200 gallons is
ok. When set up with a decent filter and diligent in minimal feeding, the Koi
would be ok. Since there is little water, as compared to 1000 gallons, to buffer
any changes in water chemistry, the pond has to be pretty clean and has to have
plenty of oxygen. The difference between a big pond and a small pond is the time
of death of their inhabitants. Bad management will kill them. The ones in
smaller pond die faster.

Koi aficionados don't recommend putting Koi in such a small pond because it
detracts from the main purpose of raising Koi, to see the graceful form of
swimming Koi. Most of us here are ponders. We are guilty of having more plants
then fish in our ponds. We won't have a problem with 2 Koi in our ponds.
Actually, we do have a problem with them destroying plants.

I'm digging a pond atm. My biggest dilemma is how to integrate floating water
plants like WH and duckweed, so that the Koi won't destroy them.



Nedra wrote:

But Sean ... I think you are kidding when you say you would
put Two koi in a 202.5 gallon pond? As Barbara said:
You will need 1,000 gallons of water for the first koi and
about 100+ gallons of water for any additional koi. The rest
of what she posts is also true for koi ...
You were kidding, right?


  #7  
Old April 11th 04, 01:14 AM
Offbreed
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Looking to add some fish

Sean Dinh wrote:

I'm digging a pond atm. My biggest dilemma is how to integrate floating water
plants like WH and duckweed, so that the Koi won't destroy them.


Maybe a floating ring with black bird netting under it to keep the
fish away from the roots? Needs a lot of plants to hide the float and
it would not work with duckweed. Though, you might be able to make an
asset of a necessity by finding a way to make the floating ring
attractive.

You might get the same effect with a bird bath like "island" in the
middle of the pond? That would mean you could use other plants and put
small lights under the plants to illuminate the fish as they are
swimming around. I think that would be really pretty. The wiring might
be a bit dicey, but a solar charged walkway light might be adapted.

A few years ago, a local store threw away something that would have
been perfect. It was a clear plastic display stand, shaped a bit like
a martini glass made of flat sheets. Probably cost a fortune to make
with the thicker plexiglass needed in stores. There's thinner, and
less expensive, around.

|_______|
| |
-----

Side view
(fixed width font)

____|
| |
|---
The support was shaped like this (top view) to make a smaller base,
but provide support for the upper "deck".

  #8  
Old April 11th 04, 01:14 AM
Offbreed
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Looking to add some fish

Sean Dinh wrote:

I'm digging a pond atm. My biggest dilemma is how to integrate floating water
plants like WH and duckweed, so that the Koi won't destroy them.


Maybe a floating ring with black bird netting under it to keep the
fish away from the roots? Needs a lot of plants to hide the float and
it would not work with duckweed. Though, you might be able to make an
asset of a necessity by finding a way to make the floating ring
attractive.

You might get the same effect with a bird bath like "island" in the
middle of the pond? That would mean you could use other plants and put
small lights under the plants to illuminate the fish as they are
swimming around. I think that would be really pretty. The wiring might
be a bit dicey, but a solar charged walkway light might be adapted.

A few years ago, a local store threw away something that would have
been perfect. It was a clear plastic display stand, shaped a bit like
a martini glass made of flat sheets. Probably cost a fortune to make
with the thicker plexiglass needed in stores. There's thinner, and
less expensive, around.

|_______|
| |
-----

Side view
(fixed width font)

____|
| |
|---
The support was shaped like this (top view) to make a smaller base,
but provide support for the upper "deck".

  #9  
Old April 12th 04, 06:20 PM
~ jan JJsPond.us
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Looking to add some fish

Sean, have you tried butterfly koi? These do much better in small swallow
ponds and are better around plants then their stubby finned relatives. The
key is to buy small, whichever type you get. ~ jan

On Sat, 10 Apr 2004 13:33:29 -0700, Sean Dinh wrote:


Actually, I made a mistake. I forgot to address the region's requirement. In
this case, I don't think it's good for poster to have any fish since his pond
might freeze without other equipment.

As for people in warmer climate like me in Southern California, 200 gallons is
ok. When set up with a decent filter and diligent in minimal feeding, the Koi
would be ok. Since there is little water, as compared to 1000 gallons, to buffer
any changes in water chemistry, the pond has to be pretty clean and has to have
plenty of oxygen. The difference between a big pond and a small pond is the time
of death of their inhabitants. Bad management will kill them. The ones in
smaller pond die faster.

Koi aficionados don't recommend putting Koi in such a small pond because it
detracts from the main purpose of raising Koi, to see the graceful form of
swimming Koi. Most of us here are ponders. We are guilty of having more plants
then fish in our ponds. We won't have a problem with 2 Koi in our ponds.
Actually, we do have a problem with them destroying plants.

I'm digging a pond atm. My biggest dilemma is how to integrate floating water
plants like WH and duckweed, so that the Koi won't destroy them.



Nedra wrote:

But Sean ... I think you are kidding when you say you would
put Two koi in a 202.5 gallon pond? As Barbara said:
You will need 1,000 gallons of water for the first koi and
about 100+ gallons of water for any additional koi. The rest
of what she posts is also true for koi ...
You were kidding, right?


~ jan (Do you know where your water quality is?)
  #10  
Old April 12th 04, 06:20 PM
~ jan JJsPond.us
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Looking to add some fish

Sean, have you tried butterfly koi? These do much better in small swallow
ponds and are better around plants then their stubby finned relatives. The
key is to buy small, whichever type you get. ~ jan

On Sat, 10 Apr 2004 13:33:29 -0700, Sean Dinh wrote:


Actually, I made a mistake. I forgot to address the region's requirement. In
this case, I don't think it's good for poster to have any fish since his pond
might freeze without other equipment.

As for people in warmer climate like me in Southern California, 200 gallons is
ok. When set up with a decent filter and diligent in minimal feeding, the Koi
would be ok. Since there is little water, as compared to 1000 gallons, to buffer
any changes in water chemistry, the pond has to be pretty clean and has to have
plenty of oxygen. The difference between a big pond and a small pond is the time
of death of their inhabitants. Bad management will kill them. The ones in
smaller pond die faster.

Koi aficionados don't recommend putting Koi in such a small pond because it
detracts from the main purpose of raising Koi, to see the graceful form of
swimming Koi. Most of us here are ponders. We are guilty of having more plants
then fish in our ponds. We won't have a problem with 2 Koi in our ponds.
Actually, we do have a problem with them destroying plants.

I'm digging a pond atm. My biggest dilemma is how to integrate floating water
plants like WH and duckweed, so that the Koi won't destroy them.



Nedra wrote:

But Sean ... I think you are kidding when you say you would
put Two koi in a 202.5 gallon pond? As Barbara said:
You will need 1,000 gallons of water for the first koi and
about 100+ gallons of water for any additional koi. The rest
of what she posts is also true for koi ...
You were kidding, right?


~ jan (Do you know where your water quality is?)
 




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