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Okay, so after having found out that I was reading my tests wrong, and
going back and redoing them, I've found I did indeed have high ammonia levels for my poor koi. I've spent the last two days trying to figure out cheap ways of building an indoor pond (it's winter in canada, apply whichever stereo-types you wish ![]() Canadian Tire sells a product called Simple-Set Translucent Pool Package, 12 ft. x 30 in. and it includes the pump. It's roughly 1300 gallons of water, and the pump moves between 500 and 1000gph. I figure since it's approved for use with small children, it ought to be safe for my fishes. That is to say, it won't leech any evil plastic chemicals, or do any other unhappy, unexpected things. I've also been 'researching' complaints about this product. The only ones I've found that relate to keeping fish (I don't care if small kids can't sit on the side), are that the upper ring often deflates. I mostly expected this since I've never seen a rubber air containing device hold air for very long, be it beach-ball, or air mattress, or one of those stupid airplanes you inflate and hang from the ceiling, only to have go limp a day later. If that becomes too much of a problem, I'll just slit the top open and stuff it full of styrofoam or something. Can anyone think of why using a tub like this would be a -bad- idea? TIA And sorry for the crossposting. Last time I posted to more than one aqua group without crossposting, I got yelled at ![]() -- http://www.neopets.com/refer.phtml?username=moosespet |
#2
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On Mon, 13 Dec 2004 03:46:22 GMT, Jon Pike
wrote: Okay, so after having found out that I was reading my tests wrong, and going back and redoing them, I've found I did indeed have high ammonia levels for my poor koi. I've spent the last two days trying to figure out cheap ways of building an indoor pond (it's winter in canada, apply whichever stereo-types you wish ![]() Canadian Tire sells a product called Simple-Set Translucent Pool Package, 12 ft. x 30 in. and it includes the pump. It's roughly 1300 gallons of water, and the pump moves between 500 and 1000gph. I figure since it's approved for use with small children, it ought to be safe for my fishes. That is to say, it won't leech any evil plastic chemicals, or do any other unhappy, unexpected things. I've also been 'researching' complaints about this product. The only ones I've found that relate to keeping fish (I don't care if small kids can't sit on the side), are that the upper ring often deflates. I mostly expected this since I've never seen a rubber air containing device hold air for very long, be it beach-ball, or air mattress, or one of those stupid airplanes you inflate and hang from the ceiling, only to have go limp a day later. If that becomes too much of a problem, I'll just slit the top open and stuff it full of styrofoam or something. Can anyone think of why using a tub like this would be a -bad- idea? Sounds like a good idea to me. Please keep us posted on how it works out. |
#3
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The Drunken Lord wrote in
: On Mon, 13 Dec 2004 03:46:22 GMT, Jon Pike wrote: Can anyone think of why using a tub like this would be a -bad- idea? Sounds like a good idea to me. Please keep us posted on how it works out. Will do. My koi's graduated from the 55 to a 80'ish for right now. It's a completely new, totally uncycled tank, but I'll be able to do daily water changes very easily. I've got a hose and drain within literally 6 feet of it. So I'm not worried about ammonia while he's in there. Has anyone got experience cycling a 'tank' that size though? Not the 80'ish, but the 1300'ish tank. Should it cycle through at the same rate, if I've got sufficient filter media, and flow rate? -- http://www.neopets.com/refer.phtml?username=moosespet |
#4
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more water, fewer fish, faster cycling. especially if you use polyester batting or
gravel (in a gravity filter). ponds dont actually "cycle" unless somebody dumps a LOT of fish into them. I always keep a sharp eye on any new pond (and even my pond in spring) just to make sure. inside light is essential maybe for algae growth which contributes to controlling wastes. also, heat is very important to getting the good biobugs established. at least 72-75oF or so. INgrid Jon Pike wrote: Has anyone got experience cycling a 'tank' that size though? Not the 80'ish, but the 1300'ish tank. Should it cycle through at the same rate, if I've got sufficient filter media, and flow rate? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 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. |
#5
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if it is reasonably cheap yes, should be fine.
As a quarantine tank for new koi I use a 100 (now I have a 150) rubbermaid stock tank. it is freestanding and deep and easy to heat if necessary since it is plastic self insulated. I put bird netting over the top and elastic (from material store) all the way around. easy to pull the netting out, but keeps the damn jumping koi in. I plunk a board across the end and constructed a simple gravity filter. http://www.mu.edu/~buxtoni/puregold/...AVITY%20FILTER altho a bucket filter probably would work fine if it was upgraded to a 5 gallons, dont use gravel, use polyester batting http://www.mu.edu/~buxtoni/puregold/...re.html#BUCKET now here is my veggie filter for my pond in the basement http://puregold.aquaria.net/mypond/V...ie_filter.html Ingrid Jon Pike wrote: Okay, so after having found out that I was reading my tests wrong, and going back and redoing them, I've found I did indeed have high ammonia levels for my poor koi. I've spent the last two days trying to figure out cheap ways of building an indoor pond (it's winter in canada, apply whichever stereo-types you wish ![]() Canadian Tire sells a product called Simple-Set Translucent Pool Package, 12 ft. x 30 in. and it includes the pump. It's roughly 1300 gallons of water, and the pump moves between 500 and 1000gph. I figure since it's approved for use with small children, it ought to be safe for my fishes. That is to say, it won't leech any evil plastic chemicals, or do any other unhappy, unexpected things. I've also been 'researching' complaints about this product. The only ones I've found that relate to keeping fish (I don't care if small kids can't sit on the side), are that the upper ring often deflates. I mostly expected this since I've never seen a rubber air containing device hold air for very long, be it beach-ball, or air mattress, or one of those stupid airplanes you inflate and hang from the ceiling, only to have go limp a day later. If that becomes too much of a problem, I'll just slit the top open and stuff it full of styrofoam or something. Can anyone think of why using a tub like this would be a -bad- idea? TIA And sorry for the crossposting. Last time I posted to more than one aqua group without crossposting, I got yelled at ![]() ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 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. |
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