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#1
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I have a two ponds connected by a small stream. I would like to use the
small pond as my filtering. You can see it at www.xex.ca ... just click on the pond link (nothing else to click on). Any suggestion would be greatly appreciated! - Francis |
#2
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Message ,
by author Prometheus Xex aka inspired me, I have a two ponds connected by a small stream. I would like to use the small pond as my filtering. You can see it at www.xex.ca ... just click on the pond link (nothing else to click on). Any suggestion would be greatly appreciated! Great pictures, great looking pond! It appears you don't have that many plants. You could setup the small pond as a swamp area, lots of plants. If the small pond is to deep for a swamp area you could setup a mesh hand deep and place the plants on top of it. The filter box you have is quite small compared with the size on the pond. You could do with a bigger one. You clean the filter often, to often I think. You filter out debris but you don't give bacteria any chance and time to convert the mess into usable plant food. There is a little trick I have. If the contents of the filter smells like fish I clean to early. If it smells like sewer waste I am to late. Somewhere in the middle is the optimum. -- d:Johan; Certifiable me Seasons Wishes at http://www.aacit.net/aac.gif Sig is being randomised, pls wait . . . . |
#3
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On Sat, 4 Jun 2005 15:19:38 -0400, "Prometheus Xex" wrote:
I have a two ponds connected by a small stream. I would like to use the small pond as my filtering. You can see it at www.xex.ca ... just click on the pond link (nothing else to click on). Any suggestion would be greatly appreciated! - Francis Really nice set up! I would have liked a picture showing the entire area. Small pond and large. :-) How much water are you currently pumping? The small pond would work great as a veggie filter. Load it up with iris planted in mesh baskets with large rocks to hold them down in the basket. For variety you could put in a cattail (these need to be in a pot they can't escape) blooming cannas, swamp hibiscus and other marginally, but you really want a lot of iris, they are great marginal veggie plants. Or you could load it with water hyacinths, but that is only a summer filter and you've got to keep them from blocking the stream. ~ jan See my ponds and filter design: www.jjspond.us ~Keep 'em Wet!~ Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
#4
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I've included a panorama or the entire pond area.
"~ janj JJsPond.us" wrote in message ... On Sat, 4 Jun 2005 15:19:38 -0400, "Prometheus Xex" wrote: I have a two ponds connected by a small stream. I would like to use the small pond as my filtering. You can see it at www.xex.ca ... just click on the pond link (nothing else to click on). Any suggestion would be greatly appreciated! - Francis Really nice set up! I would have liked a picture showing the entire area. Small pond and large. :-) How much water are you currently pumping? The small pond would work great as a veggie filter. Load it up with iris planted in mesh baskets with large rocks to hold them down in the basket. For variety you could put in a cattail (these need to be in a pot they can't escape) blooming cannas, swamp hibiscus and other marginally, but you really want a lot of iris, they are great marginal veggie plants. Or you could load it with water hyacinths, but that is only a summer filter and you've got to keep them from blocking the stream. ~ jan See my ponds and filter design: www.jjspond.us ~Keep 'em Wet!~ Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
#5
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You've already got all you need except for adding LOTS of
plants, floating plants with lots of roots are the best. Slow the flow rate of your pump dowm so the water spends more time in the veggie filter section and you're all set. Ron |
#6
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Oh I forgot, get rid of the filter box, you won't need it
anymore. Ron Ron Lawrence KC4YOY wrote in message . com... You've already got all you need except for adding LOTS of plants, floating plants with lots of roots are the best. Slow the flow rate of your pump dowm so the water spends more time in the veggie filter section and you're all set. Ron |
#7
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![]() Oh I forgot, get rid of the filter box, you won't need it anymore. Veggie filters are so much better than standard biofilters, because they strip nitrates out of the system, where the standard biofilters strip organics, but produces nitrates. In sal****er aquaria, particularly reef systems, the only biofilters that are really "approved" any more are protein skimmers (not useful in freshwater application). Much of the high flow nitrate-producing stuff is now black listed. Planted refugiums and deep sand beds are the main thing, now. The deep sand bed is anaerobic. It eats organics and produces nitrogen gas, which bubbles out of the system (no dissolved nitrates). IIRC, this is more of a concern in reef systems, where corals are very nitrate sensitive. C// |
#8
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I'll start doing my research into converting the small pond into a veggie
filter. I want to ensure that I don't have to purchase the plants again next year from potential damage from freezing. unlike the big pond, the small one completely freezes. My in-laws have a 30 acre cottage in Perry Sound where there's a huge abundance of peat material with growing honey dews and picture plants. These probably a few acres of this. Wondering if I could utilize a few square feet of it on my filter. The lake freezes over every year, but the plants come back after the spring thaw. Could this be done? - Francis " Ron Lawrence KC4YOY" wrote in message . com... You've already got all you need except for adding LOTS of plants, floating plants with lots of roots are the best. Slow the flow rate of your pump dowm so the water spends more time in the veggie filter section and you're all set. Ron |
#9
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![]() Prometheus Xex wrote in message I want to ensure that I don't have to purchase the plants again next year from potential damage from freezing Can't help you there, I have to buy plants every year to replace the ones that die from the cold. The pond nor filter don't freeze, but the plants die when the air temp drops in the winter. I wouldn't think a frozen bog would allow much water flow. Ron |
#10
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![]() " Ron Lawrence KC4YOY" wrote in message news:KBPoe.22931 Can't help you there, I have to buy plants every year to replace the ones that die from the cold. The pond nor filter don't freeze, but the plants die when the air temp drops in the winter. I wouldn't think a frozen bog would allow much water flow. ======================================= My plants don't die over the winter. I'm in zone 6 which can get some really cold cold-snaps. One winter I lost my parrots feather for some reason, perhaps a rot of some kind. Maybe you're buying the more tropical type.... -- McKoi.... the frugal ponder... EVERYONE: "Please check people's headers for forgeries before flushing." NAMES ARE BEING FORGED. Do not feed the trolls. ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
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