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#1
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I have installed about a 75' stream in my backyard that is circulated with a
Sequence 1000-5800 pump. It is fairly shallow, about 12" - 16" in the center channel area, 3 feet wide. I have a skimmer on one end. I figure I am moving about 4000-4500 GPH after head/pipe losses so the flow is quite strong at the skimmer. What fish would you recommend that would work in the shallower waters, like the water movement, and not be forever getting caught in the skimmer? Thanks |
#2
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Trout.
(just kidding, sorry) On Mon, 19 Apr 2004 12:55:03 -0400, "tg" wrote: I have installed about a 75' stream in my backyard that is circulated with a Sequence 1000-5800 pump. It is fairly shallow, about 12" - 16" in the center channel area, 3 feet wide. I have a skimmer on one end. I figure I am moving about 4000-4500 GPH after head/pipe losses so the flow is quite strong at the skimmer. What fish would you recommend that would work in the shallower waters, like the water movement, and not be forever getting caught in the skimmer? Thanks |
#3
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Trout.
(just kidding, sorry) On Mon, 19 Apr 2004 12:55:03 -0400, "tg" wrote: I have installed about a 75' stream in my backyard that is circulated with a Sequence 1000-5800 pump. It is fairly shallow, about 12" - 16" in the center channel area, 3 feet wide. I have a skimmer on one end. I figure I am moving about 4000-4500 GPH after head/pipe losses so the flow is quite strong at the skimmer. What fish would you recommend that would work in the shallower waters, like the water movement, and not be forever getting caught in the skimmer? Thanks |
#4
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tg wrote:
I have installed about a 75' stream in my backyard that is circulated with a Sequence 1000-5800 pump. It is fairly shallow, about 12" - 16" in the center channel area, 3 feet wide. I have a skimmer on one end. I figure I am moving about 4000-4500 GPH after head/pipe losses so the flow is quite strong at the skimmer. What fish would you recommend that would work in the shallower waters, like the water movement, and not be forever getting caught in the skimmer? I've seen basic mosquito fish do pretty well in a shallow stream environment before. My undergrad campus had a stream even shallower than yours (maybe 8" tops) with tons of mosquito fish and short plants, and the flow wasn't as much, but they seemed to do well. Cheap, so it's not a big deal when the migratory birds come in for the invitable feeding you're going to get on a shallow stream, heh. That stream on campus had a small green heron that would be an annual attraction eating the mosquito fish. Never bothered the koi and goldfish in the main pond at the bottom of the stream because of it. Another plus is the mosquito fish will take care of most insect larva that might happen to be laid in the stream. And if this stream gets any sort of direct sunlight, you'll probably want to consider having some short and/or fast growing plants (if you don't already) unless you want it to be an algae paradise. That was another problem the campus stream had. The maintenance crew knew very little about aquaculture, so they'd pull plants along with the algae not realizing the plants would help prevent algae (or not caring since it takes more effort to remove string algae without taking out large sections of plants). So the plant load was never adequate enough to deal with the nutrients in the water and the algae would keep coming back. I'm pretty sure the pond designer had meant the stream to be a vegative filter for the pond due to its length, flow and the types of plants that were put in there. But that only works when the maintenance staff leaves the plants in place, heh. The few sections of the stream where the plants had become well-established were pretty algae free. |
#5
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tg wrote:
I have installed about a 75' stream in my backyard that is circulated with a Sequence 1000-5800 pump. It is fairly shallow, about 12" - 16" in the center channel area, 3 feet wide. I have a skimmer on one end. I figure I am moving about 4000-4500 GPH after head/pipe losses so the flow is quite strong at the skimmer. What fish would you recommend that would work in the shallower waters, like the water movement, and not be forever getting caught in the skimmer? I've seen basic mosquito fish do pretty well in a shallow stream environment before. My undergrad campus had a stream even shallower than yours (maybe 8" tops) with tons of mosquito fish and short plants, and the flow wasn't as much, but they seemed to do well. Cheap, so it's not a big deal when the migratory birds come in for the invitable feeding you're going to get on a shallow stream, heh. That stream on campus had a small green heron that would be an annual attraction eating the mosquito fish. Never bothered the koi and goldfish in the main pond at the bottom of the stream because of it. Another plus is the mosquito fish will take care of most insect larva that might happen to be laid in the stream. And if this stream gets any sort of direct sunlight, you'll probably want to consider having some short and/or fast growing plants (if you don't already) unless you want it to be an algae paradise. That was another problem the campus stream had. The maintenance crew knew very little about aquaculture, so they'd pull plants along with the algae not realizing the plants would help prevent algae (or not caring since it takes more effort to remove string algae without taking out large sections of plants). So the plant load was never adequate enough to deal with the nutrients in the water and the algae would keep coming back. I'm pretty sure the pond designer had meant the stream to be a vegative filter for the pond due to its length, flow and the types of plants that were put in there. But that only works when the maintenance staff leaves the plants in place, heh. The few sections of the stream where the plants had become well-established were pretty algae free. |
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