![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I'm damn sure I'm going to need more filtration for my pond. I have set
aside an area for this. It just so happens I had made the area while designing the pond, so lucky me. The area is about 4-5"s deep. I can elongate it with sand & pea rock if I have to too add the filter. Do I have to have all the plants in containers, one big container all together or plant them right in the pea/soil bed? Can I just run a water line after the submersible filer/pump I already have to the bog and control the water flow with a valve? The plumbing aspect of ponding isn't really a problem for me seeing as that's what I do for a living. its the balancing for the pond that's got me scathing my head. I went to a wicked awesome nursery today & bought some plants for the bog (grasses) and some more oxygenating plants for the bottom as well. So is this a bog or a veggie filter? They the same thing more or less. Can someone explain it to me like a 3 year old. I could build a filer box as well but which method works best? If I do go this route I'll use a flower pot as I want keep the pond as natural as possible. I don't want to see plastic boxes everywhere. I don't want to use chemicals if I DON'T HAVE TO either. I've been reading that DIY is a good way to go. I take it the filter box should filter as slowly as possible through the system without compensating water flow back to the pond. Again thanks in advance for the input people. -- The~Doofie~Man © "LET ME SEE YOUR CIGARETTE LIGHTERS!!!!!" Putting the fun back in FUNeral!! http://www.geocities.com/doof70/index.html |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
What a hideous way to spell "questions" in the subject line.
Shame on me!!!! -- The~Doofie~Man © "LET ME SEE YOUR CIGARETTE LIGHTERS!!!!!" Putting the fun back in FUNeral!! http://www.geocities.com/doof70/index.html "The~Doofie~Man©" wrote in message .. . I'm damn sure I'm going to need more filtration for my pond. I have set aside an area for this. It just so happens I had made the area while designing the pond, so lucky me. The area is about 4-5"s deep. I can elongate it with sand & pea rock if I have to too add the filter. Do I have to have all the plants in containers, one big container all together or plant them right in the pea/soil bed? Can I just run a water line after the submersible filer/pump I already have to the bog and control the water flow with a valve? The plumbing aspect of ponding isn't really a problem for me seeing as that's what I do for a living. its the balancing for the pond that's got me scathing my head. I went to a wicked awesome nursery today & bought some plants for the bog (grasses) and some more oxygenating plants for the bottom as well. So is this a bog or a veggie filter? They the same thing more or less. Can someone explain it to me like a 3 year old. I could build a filer box as well but which method works best? If I do go this route I'll use a flower pot as I want keep the pond as natural as possible. I don't want to see plastic boxes everywhere. I don't want to use chemicals if I DON'T HAVE TO either. I've been reading that DIY is a good way to go. I take it the filter box should filter as slowly as possible through the system without compensating water flow back to the pond. Again thanks in advance for the input people. -- The~Doofie~Man © "LET ME SEE YOUR CIGARETTE LIGHTERS!!!!!" Putting the fun back in FUNeral!! http://www.geocities.com/doof70/index.html |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I fixed the subject line for you ;-)
A veggie filter uses plant for filtration. How you go about doing this changes from person to person. Mine has plants without pots and no stones or gravel. It is approximately 16' long and 4' wide and 2' deep. At the spot where the water enters I have window screen to act as a mechanical filter, then the plants and at the end I have bioballs. For plants I have water celery, water hyacinth, and water cress. -- Bonnie NJ http://home.earthlink.net/~maebe43/ |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Veggie filter is any place water runs through plants on its way to the pond.
Solisd and mechanically filtered or settled out. Nutirents are grabbed by plants. More growth, more nutrients out. Think in terms of filtration AND cleaning! Once it is full of muck, how do we get the muck out? Natural ponds become bogs which become fertile fields. If you want a field, don't clean your bog. Gravel and junk in the bog will hold muck. If you line your bog with a liner, you can grow plants and then flush out the junk. Gravel is very hard to clean effectively. Our veggie filters are kiddie pools with 2" drains in the bottom (PVC piping). Cleaning is opening a valve and letting the water run out. We then flush with pond water. Sooooo easy. When we had a lava rock filter, it was a nightmare of flushing and hauling rock out. However your plants are put in, be sure to have a lot of root surface to filter and to grab nutrients. Have fun. Jim -- ____________________________________________ See our pond at: home.bellsouth.net\p\pwp-jameshurley Ask me about Jog-A-Thon fundraiser (clears $120+ per child) at: jogathon.net "The~Doofie~Man©" wrote in message .. . I'm damn sure I'm going to need more filtration for my pond. I have set aside an area for this. It just so happens I had made the area while designing the pond, so lucky me. The area is about 4-5"s deep. I can elongate it with sand & pea rock if I have to too add the filter. Do I have to have all the plants in containers, one big container all together or plant them right in the pea/soil bed? Can I just run a water line after the submersible filer/pump I already have to the bog and control the water flow with a valve? The plumbing aspect of ponding isn't really a problem for me seeing as that's what I do for a living. its the balancing for the pond that's got me scathing my head. I went to a wicked awesome nursery today & bought some plants for the bog (grasses) and some more oxygenating plants for the bottom as well. So is this a bog or a veggie filter? They the same thing more or less. Can someone explain it to me like a 3 year old. I could build a filer box as well but which method works best? If I do go this route I'll use a flower pot as I want keep the pond as natural as possible. I don't want to see plastic boxes everywhere. I don't want to use chemicals if I DON'T HAVE TO either. I've been reading that DIY is a good way to go. I take it the filter box should filter as slowly as possible through the system without compensating water flow back to the pond. Again thanks in advance for the input people. -- The~Doofie~Man © "LET ME SEE YOUR CIGARETTE LIGHTERS!!!!!" Putting the fun back in FUNeral!! http://www.geocities.com/doof70/index.html |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Although many people have specific areas for a veg filter, you don't need
one. The goal of a veggie filter is to have plants convert the waste in the water into plant matter, before the algae can. The entire pond can be an veg filter, if you can put the plants in areas where they won't turn into a koi salad bar. Almost any aquatic plant can be a veg filter plant, but the faster growing plants are more efficient, which is why water hyacinth are so popular. Sameer |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
One more question: Undergravel Filters | Dances With Ferrets | Plants | 0 | May 24th 04 03:56 AM |
Pump Filters constantly clogging | RussellinMD | General | 8 | March 6th 04 10:40 PM |
Eheim filters | McEve | General | 2 | December 9th 03 11:10 PM |
[Slightly OT] Aquarium filters - alternative use? | Flash Wilson | General | 5 | December 4th 03 11:38 PM |
D-I-Y replacement filters for penguin bio-wheels | E.Otter | Goldfish | 5 | October 8th 03 05:17 AM |