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![]() "Sean Dinh" wrote in message ... According to that site, the hub must be at the lowest part of the bog. During normal operation, the water from a circulation/filter pump would feed into the hub, to the pipe, then up flow to the surface. No, if you'll look again, I think you'll see that the supply hose goes into the free end of the slotted pipe and then the water percolates up through the rock like a common old septic field. When I say "pipe" I mean the horizontal one. Is that what you mean? And, I still think you need one one each side of the hub, except for the back side, that doesn't face the pond. That would leave the back gravel awfully dry. The plants would only grow in the front of it if you did that. Maybe the shape I have in mind is too short from front to back for this design. The way I built my first bog, and I liked it pretty well, was to run the feed pipe to the back of the bog, so that it wets the whole gravel field to varying degrees. In this mode, there got to be a lid on that hub to enclose the system. Otherwise, water would not up flow through the hub, and become useless. The man who is trying to sell me one of these says that the hub is really just a clean out. He says that you scrape the gravel off the lid and remove it about once a year. When you do this, all it supposedly requires is to drop a sump pump in and such out the yuck. It's true that you have to have a lid, but it's just to keep out the rocks until you open it to clean it, and so you can bury it out of sight. During cleaning/draining operation, the water from the circulation pump is stopped. The lid would be removed. The water would now down flow to the pipe, then to the hub. A sump pump is inserted down the hub, to drain the bog. Hmmm... well, at first, I didn't get much of that at all. But as I was typing out my confusion, It started to make sense. I guess you mean that the water would "fall" out of the rock, and down into the slotted pipe and into the chamber. (And is there a valve between the hose and pump, so that you don't get back-wash into the pond? And, will the sump get the dirty water out of the hose? It doesn't seem like there's enough of a vacuum for that.) That part is clearer to me now, but I still have some trouble with what you wrote at the beginning. It doesn't matter though, because the last part clears up the worst of the confusion for me. And, besides, if that's what you're telling me, how does the water keep from puddling up just a little, under the pipe, where it's solid? Of course it has to be solid there, but it still looks like it would make a problem. Do you like this design? Here's the link again for anyone who wants to go there w/o having to scroll down into the quoted op. http://www.thepondprofessional.biz/c...roduct_id=1190 Now, having stumbled through all that, don't you think it would be relatively easy to build something like this for under a hundred dollars? Or, after seeing a reference in another post to a bottom drain in a veggie filter, I am now mulling that idea over - the drain, not the vf - since this bog will be raised up off the ground by about fourteen inches and there is an existing ground drain immediately behind it. It just seems like $600.00 would buy a lot of liner, rock and plants for my new pond around the corner from this one that I am trying to improve. I think I'll start working on trying to describe the germ of my drain idea, in another post to this thread. Thanks, Sean, Ann Ann in Houston wrote: I am planning a gravel bog addition to my koi pond. I was told about a filter from Aquascape called the "Snorkel", which is made for this purpose. Supposedly, you just sink a sump in the clean out once a year or so, and there is no need for washing the gravel. Here is a link for a similar model with a diagram. I don't get how the solids get to the clean out vault. Also, I wonder how the water would disperse to the sides when it can just go up and then down the slope and back to the pond. They sell additional slotted pipe sections, to put out to the sides with the vault acting as a hub, but the base unit is $600.00!!!!!!!! and each extra pipe is three to four hundred more. And besides, I don't think I want that many hoses going to this bog. It will only be about six feet wide. I can think of a couple of different ways to accomplish the settling of the gunky stuff in some kind of container buried like this one. And if it's successful, I'll sell it to anyone here for a measly 250.00. I mean, that rubbermaid stuff gets pricey. ; ) Here's the link. http://www.thepondprofessional.biz/c...roduct_id=1190 If anyone here can help me understand this diagram, maybe a few of us can put our heads together to do it cheaper, and possibly better. Any help is appreciated. I am going to also post this on garden web. Thanks, Ann |
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