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#1
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I live in Saskatchewan ,Canada and the winters are very cold here.I mean -20
to -30 c on average .I have been putting my large koi inside in the past but now they are too big.My pond is apr 600 -750 gal with 2 1/2 feet at the deepest and I would like to try a de icer.Anyone out there in cold canada that has tried this please help,thanks. |
#2
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On Sat, 16 Sep 2006 02:06:49 -0600, "sue"
wrote: I live in Saskatchewan ,Canada and the winters are very cold here.I mean -20 to -30 c on average .I have been putting my large koi inside in the past but now they are too big.My pond is apr 600 -750 gal with 2 1/2 feet at the deepest and I would like to try a de icer.Anyone out there in cold canada that has tried this please help,thanks. I wish you the best and hope you will let us know how the winter goes for you. Regards, Hal |
#3
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![]() "sue" wrote in message ... I live in Saskatchewan ,Canada and the winters are very cold here.I mean -20 to -30 c on average .I have been putting my large koi inside in the past but now they are too big.My pond is apr 600 -750 gal with 2 1/2 feet at the deepest and I would like to try a de icer.Anyone out there in cold canada that has tried this please help,thanks. One year I covered my pond and put in a small heater. Last year I put them in a stock tank with light for the WH. Both worked out well, I had lost of plants and fry with the stock tank. But the Stock Tank cost me about $20 a month for light and caused a bit of excess moisture. I may go back to the cover this year, but I haven't decided yet. Cover was 2x4s insulated with Styrofoam and covered with OSB and plastic. I also put a small heater in the pond to keep the water around 40°F. The big problem was that the cover was HEAVY and difficult to put in place. |
#4
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that isnt very deep, not really deep enough for koi in general. you need to cover
this with plastic, then styrofoam and drop in a heater. be sure to build it so there is at least a 1 foot air gap above the water level and a hole somewhere to let gases escape. and pray that the electricity doesnt go out. my 4 foot deep pond drops at least 8 inches of water over winter. you need to be careful that the water doesnt drop too much. Ingrid "sue" wrote: I live in Saskatchewan ,Canada and the winters are very cold here.I mean -20 to -30 c on average .I have been putting my large koi inside in the past but now they are too big.My pond is apr 600 -750 gal with 2 1/2 feet at the deepest and I would like to try a de icer.Anyone out there in cold canada that has tried this please help,thanks. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List at http://weloveteaching.com/puregold/ sign up: http://groups.google.com/groups/dir?...s=Group+lookup www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I receive no compensation for running the Puregold list or Puregold website. I do not run nor receive any money from the ads at the old Puregold site. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Zone 5 next to Lake Michigan |
#5
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Each year I remove the filter and run only the pump with the hose near the water so the ice doesn't form over completely. Because there have been some formidable ice fall build ups, I also bought a cattle de-icer two years ago and plopped it in. Voila! Reduced ice build up and absolutely no problems. Even my token frog has managed to winter over four seasons so far! Cheers! L |
#6
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sue wrote:
I live in Saskatchewan ,Canada and the winters are very cold here.I mean -20 to -30 c on average .I have been putting my large koi inside in the past but now they are too big.My pond is apr 600 -750 gal with 2 1/2 feet at the deepest and I would like to try a de icer.Anyone out there in cold canada that has tried this please help,thanks. I live in southern Ontario and I disconnect my pump hoses and just let them run in one confined area so it allows one small area of the pond to create a hole so deadly gases escape. My pond is also only 2.5 feet deep but it probably doesn't get as cold as in Saskatchewan. My problem with heaters is when it gets cold they will run continuously and have you seen the price of electricity these days ? -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#7
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I've had my pond for 7 years now (Nova Scotia) and all I do is take out my
circulating pump and use an air pump with the hose threaded through a piece of styrofome. The hose drops about 18 inches in my pond, the air bubbles keeps the water aerated, and keeps a hole open all winter long. I've tried to use an air stone, but it wasn't as effective as just the bare hose end. . If there is a large snowfall, I just shovel it off around the hole so as to be able to see the air bubbling through. Over the pump I just placed a plastic coffee can so that the air intakes don't get plugged. "sue" wrote in message ... I live in Saskatchewan ,Canada and the winters are very cold here.I mean -20 to -30 c on average .I have been putting my large koi inside in the past but now they are too big.My pond is apr 600 -750 gal with 2 1/2 feet at the deepest and I would like to try a de icer.Anyone out there in cold canada that has tried this please help,thanks. |
#8
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DRS wrote:
I've had my pond for 7 years now (Nova Scotia) and all I do is take out my circulating pump and use an air pump with the hose threaded through a piece of styrofome. The hose drops about 18 inches in my pond, the air bubbles keeps the water aerated, and keeps a hole open all winter long. I've tried to use an air stone, but it wasn't as effective as just the bare hose end. . If there is a large snowfall, I just shovel it off around the hole so as to be able to see the air bubbling through. Over the pump I just placed a plastic coffee can so that the air intakes don't get plugged. I was a little more careful with my air-pump in Ontario. It was fastened to the inside of an upside-down plastic bucket, to keep it dry. I too found that the airstone didn't work well - I lost two to the bottom of the pond. I think the temperature fluctuations worked it loose too easily. The other problem - less likely here in Nova Scotia - was moisture in the airline freezing. Still, it's much less costly than running a heater or water pump through the winter. -- derek |
#9
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Thanks,I have been looking on the internet and there are lots of new pond
de-icers specific to ponds that run less money.I was going to try one.Winters here can be brutal and I want to do everything possible for my fish,and that means domed with plastic ,styrofoam with old pump bubbling and de-icer. "sue" wrote in message ... I live in Saskatchewan ,Canada and the winters are very cold here.I mean -20 to -30 c on average .I have been putting my large koi inside in the past but now they are too big.My pond is apr 600 -750 gal with 2 1/2 feet at the deepest and I would like to try a de icer.Anyone out there in cold canada that has tried this please help,thanks. |
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