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Well it certainly was not the real plants that turned the water green
either. You evidently had an algae bloom.........which can also happen in a bare pond without any plants. For some reason or other I can't see artifical plants in a water garden setup.........All of my pickerel rush and cat tails are in 6" or more of water and do extremely well...... Mon, 15 Aug 2005 20:50:20 GMT, "Cheryl and Rob" wrote: ===Anyone ever use artificial plants in their pond? I tried a few real plants ===and they just made the water really dark green after just three days. I had ===a little Anchors and a dwarf cattail and a pickerel rush (blue). === ===I understand that the cattail and the pickeral rush are marginals and I did ===have them in six inches of water and no leaves fell off of either of them to ===make the water green. The anacharis was submerged as well. === ===Does anyone have any logical explanation as to why my water went dark green? === ============================================== Put some color in your cheeks...garden naked! "The original frugal ponder" ~~~~ }((((o ~~~~~~ }{{{{o ~~~~~~~ }(((((o |
#2
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Know thine enemy
Algae is normal and natural and needed by the lower end species in your pond. One of the bulding blocks of life. Our problem is when things get out of balance, very easy in backyard ponds, and algae goes gonzo... Green Water is caused by single cell free floating suspended in the water column algae. String algae is long, flowing, likes moving water and has some body to it. Substrate algae is like a fuzzy green sweater and grows on rocks, liners, plant baskets, and is considered a good algae as it keeps the suspended and string algae at bay. It also hosts lots of tiny zoo plankton, insect larvae, worms and other tasties that are good for fish to consume along with their veggies (the algae). All algae thrives on sun, fresh water, fish waste, fertilized run off, rotting plants and blown in dirt. In new ponds and spring ponds algae is always the first thing to start growing. The best defense against algae is to have lots of plants to compete for the nutrients, few fish, not overfeeding those fish, some shade, blocking run off and cleaning up debris. Do not use algaecides, they only make lots of suddenly dead algae to feed the next algae bloom. Algaecides also use up oxygen in the pond and put the fish in stress. Gently remove string algae. Don't worry about fuzzy algae that grows on the sides of things, the fish will eat it up if they are not overfed. Most algae blooms will pass within a couple of weeks. Time and patience is key. Remember patience... and plants. kathy :-) www.blogfromthebog.com this week's entry - water striders! Pond 101 page for new pond keepers ~ http://hometown.aol.com/ka30p/myhomepage/garden.html |
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