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Old May 15th 04, 10:01 PM
Ka30P
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Default filtration?

Destroyallx wrote i heard that i should fill my filter container with small
pebbles,
rocks, pea gravel etc. and have it surrounded by a filter material.. would
this help?
im really sick of looking a green pond!

No, don't fill the filter box with rocks - is way too hard to clean! Unless you
want to combine ponding with a weight lifting program...
A good light weight alternative is black vinyl screening available at the
hardware store. Sew bags out of it and stuff them full of the screening.
This will act as a mechanical filter (catch gunk)
and a biological filter (convert fishy ammonia).
Best green water filter is a plant filter. Watch for BV, Bonnies and Ingrid
Solo's posts and check their websites.
(Someday I'm going to add those sites to my green water tips...)

For green water study the below posted green water tips (quizzes are given
every third Monday ;-)


Algae fighting tips
~ Nutrients for all forms of algae are sun, new water, fish waste, fertilized
run off, rotting plants, blown in dirt.
~ New ponds and spring ponds need time for plants to get established, algae is
quicker at getting going.
~ add plants, of any kind, in the pond. Especially underwater plants.
~ Shade is good - provided by lily pads, floating plants or artificial shade
for part of the day.
~ LOW fish stocking (20 gallons per goldfish, 100 per koi after starting with
1,000 gallons) and *not* overfeeding the fish. Too many fish and too much
feeding is probably responsible for most pea soup water, followed closely by
too much decaying plant matter, sludge and overall gunk in the water
~ adding a combination mechanical and biological filter to screen gunk and
convert fishy ammonia waste for fish health.
~ build a veggie filter, to run water through plants, as easy as floating water
hyacinth in your filter.
~ clean up dead plant matter and screen for falling leaves
in the fall. Clean out the pond once a year.
~ water movement, occasional water changes of 10%
~ add a sludge consumer, concentrated bacteria.
many rec.ponders use http://www.united-tech.com/m-aq4u-toc.html
~ Check your pH, too high, over 8.8, or too low, under 6.4, and most higher
plant forms can't take up the nutrients.
~ building ponds with bottom drains and skimmers.
~ do not use algaecides, they only make lots of suddenly dead algae
and that will feed the next algae bloom.
~ do not worry about algae that grows on things (substrate algae) this is good
for a pond
~ gently remove string algae
~ UV lights work on suspended algae (green water) - does cost some $$.
~ patience and time ;-)


kathy :-)
A HREF="http://www.onceuponapond.com/"Once upon a pond/A
 




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