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![]() "KarenZ" wrote in message om... snip My pond is very small (about 50 gallons or so I think) and I had two cute little 3" koi. They lived for about a month. When the second died today, I took a sample of water in to where I bought the koi and they tested it, and told me it was too acidic. The other levels were OK. Two Koi in 50 gallons is about 950 gallons too little. If your fish were small, you probably were OK, but were destined for bad water problems as they grew, and grew. You may want to stick with a goldfish or two. They are more tolerant of water problems, and as such don't need that larger volume of water. I had just done a forced water change of about half the pond water in the week before the last koi died; one of the pumps got bumped and pumped half the pond water out into the garden. I replaced the water over several days; each batch of water I added to the pond sat out 24 hours before adding it. It also rained heavily the day before the last fish died. This paragraph rings a bell for me. My county uses Chloramine not Chlorine for water treatment. Chloramine does not evaporate out as readily from water as does Chlorine. I NEVER add water to the pond without dechlor. I did this to my pond when I first built it and killed all six minnows that I had in it. My guess is that your fish suffered either from chloramine, or possibly from a temperature shock from the water change. My advice to you is to buy a test kit. Here is a nice one at PetSmart, http://tinyurl.com/33539. BV. |
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![]() Hi Karen, Glad you found your way here. Often petstores, even some nurseries, don't know much about ponds and you don't get good advice from them. But we know a lot and we give good advice ;-) What everyone else says. Two goldfish in 50 gallons will be fine. There are some loverly ones out there who rival koi in their colors. Also when you get the test kit, post exact numbers as some numbers can have a scale of measurements that are okay and some if there is even a bit reported is not good. Algae eaters can turn on fish so we don't recommend them. As BV said algae that grows in the side of the pond or on the sides of your pots helps your pond. What ponders don't like is algae that makes your pond look like pea soup. Click the link below my sig. and you can read my algae primer to help you understand who to avoid an algae bloom or deal with one when it happens. We'll have you up and running in no time. For now I'd call your city/county, find out what is in your water, buy the product needed and treat the water. When you add fish float them in their bag for about 20 minutes, you are waiting for the temperatures in the bag to adjust to the water so the fish won't be shocked by a rapid adjustment in temperature. (If the sun is shining on the bag, shade it with a kitchen towel.) Unfortunately many of us have had some of the same experiences but we learned and have gone on to run successful ponds. kathy :-) algae primer http://hometown.aol.com/ka30p/myhomepage/garden.html |
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