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"volts500" wrote in message
... "how" wrote in message . .. "volts500" wrote in message . .. Forget the plecostomus (me superstitious? no) they will not keep the sides clean. Depends upon the size of the "pond" and the number of plecos. snip Middle "pond" has another Pleco and a red ear slider snip If I want to "polish" the water, I put Poly Squares snip You and I are just not going to get along ;-) turtles in a water garden- not me. Personally have never seen plecostomus keep pond sides clean and in most cases this would not be wanted if they did. I guess with a "proper" pleco/gallon ratio and the addition of no food it is possible. The last time I had any in a pond that I maintained, they (Hypostomus plecostomus) would surface on their backs and suck the food intended for the goldfish. The polyfiber thing is great. I use it in a portable ex-sand filter along with flocculants to "clear the green pond because we are having a party this weekend" syndrome. They will die when the water is 55/50 degrees F and are very hard to catch to bring in for the winter. There is no doubt that they will die at lower temps and are difficult to catch. Here in central FL they do very well in the wild and in small "ponds", such as mine.. I haven't recorded the water temps. when the air temps. get down into the 30's here, but the Plecos do hang in there. South Florida here and they have floated from cold. They do supposedly inhabit canals in this area and I'm assuming they 'mud it' when it gets cold. Are you one of them new Northern fellers who don't think Fl has winters and have not seen ice on their pond yet ;-) ? Me too, well actually it has been 30+ years here and I've had ice. Personally have never seen one sucking on another fish but others have observed this. IMO they are useless in a pond, not the least bit cute and hard to handle. LFS that sell them as 'a must' for ponds are to be avoided. I wouldn't say that they are a must either, however, with a white liner, every little bit helps. Again, from my experience, a _lot_ of scrubbing (a white liner) could be avoided if the right number of Plecos are put in the right size pond. The LFS's in my area that I go to actually told me _not_ to put them in my pond, but then I have been known to raise/breed Discus outside year round here too. snip Well you could teach me something about fish husbandry I'm sure. I don't know anything about Discus did you need heat to do winters with them? You should listen to your LFS ;-) Any citations on gradual introduction of carbon filtration? Some carbon manufacturers will state same right on the box or jar. snip Most ponders don't use white liners either :-) If you know a better, less expensive way to remove the amber tint (tannins), I'm all ears. I'm still puzzled on this one, teach me. What does AC remove that is required for fish? I know it can remove chlorine/chloramines, medications, pesticides, color ---- OK, I forgot that one and carbon will remove the tint and we were talking white liner. The cost of 1to 3 lbs per 1000 gallons per 1 to 2 months will, IMO, increase the acceptance of a slight yellow tint to most ponders. Did I at least 'un-superstious' you? I.E. ple*cos - plecos ;-) L8R -_- how no NEWS is good |
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![]() "how" wrote in message . .. You and I are just not going to get along ;-) turtles in a water garden- not me. The turtle came out of nowhere, but there is a nearby drainage ditch/culvert that leads to a retention pond, though. It is welcome to stay along with the other creatures that saunter in :-) I may draw the line at raccoons and herons, though....so far we haven't had them (***). I don't like it when the Bluejays eat the baby treefrogs, either, but the cats help some with that problem. The turtle hasn't caused any problems as of yet. It was very small when it came...about 4" now. Only time will tell. Personally have never seen plecostomus keep pond sides clean and in most cases this would not be wanted if they did. I guess with a "proper" pleco/gallon ratio and the addition of no food it is possible. The last time I had any in a pond that I maintained, they (Hypostomus plecostomus) would surface on their backs and suck the food intended for the goldfish. Ours do that too, but the goldfish get the lion's share. Usually I only feed enough so that the food is gone by the time the Plecos get up to the top.........that's why the wife sneaks out to give them more. I gave up trying to convince her that I _want_ them to be hungry so they will eat the algae instead. Even though she feeds them pellets, they still keep the sides of the pond clean. The polyfiber thing is great. I use it in a portable ex-sand filter along with flocculants to "clear the green pond because we are having a party this weekend" syndrome. They will die when the water is 55/50 degrees F and are very hard to catch to bring in for the winter. There is no doubt that they will die at lower temps and are difficult to catch. Here in central FL they do very well in the wild and in small "ponds", such as mine.. I haven't recorded the water temps. when the air temps. get down into the 30's here, but the Plecos do hang in there. South Florida here and they have floated from cold. They do supposedly inhabit canals in this area and I'm assuming they 'mud it' when it gets cold. Are you one of them new Northern fellers who don't think Fl has winters and have not seen ice on their pond yet ;-) ? Me too, well actually it has been 30+ years here and I've had ice. I've had aquariums for 35 years, but only had a water garden for about 4 or 5 years here. As you know, Winter's have been pretty mild in recent years. We're probably due for some cold. If it gets too cold, I'll drop a heater in there for 'em. I do remember when it snowed in '76, though, and a lot orange groves and strawberries got damaged from the freeze in '84(?). Personally have never seen one sucking on another fish but others have observed this. IMO they are useless in a pond, not the least bit cute and hard to handle. LFS that sell them as 'a must' for ponds are to be avoided. I wouldn't say that they are a must either, however, with a white liner, every little bit helps. Again, from my experience, a _lot_ of scrubbing (a white liner) could be avoided if the right number of Plecos are put in the right size pond. The LFS's in my area that I go to actually told me _not_ to put them in my pond, but then I have been known to raise/breed Discus outside year round here too. snip Well you could teach me something about fish husbandry I'm sure. I don't know anything about Discus did you need heat to do winters with them? You should listen to your LFS ;-) I wouldn't do it again because it's just too hard on them, but, yeah, styrofoam around the tanks and lots of aquarium heaters. Only burnt out one heater. Any citations on gradual introduction of carbon filtration? Some carbon manufacturers will state same right on the box or jar. snip Most ponders don't use white liners either :-) If you know a better, less expensive way to remove the amber tint (tannins), I'm all ears. I'm still puzzled on this one, teach me. What does AC remove that is required for fish? I know it can remove chlorine/chloramines, medications, pesticides, color ---- OK, I forgot that one and carbon will remove the tint and we were talking white liner. That was the only reason that I mentioned the AC, tint. The cost of 1to 3 lbs per 1000 gallons per 1 to 2 months will, IMO, increase the acceptance of a slight yellow tint to most ponders. Agreed. Probably the same for the DE too, if a sizable veggie filter is used for settling. I had assumed that Kathy was looking for pristine, crystal clear water since a white liner was mentioned. Did I at least 'un-superstious' you? I.E. ple*cos - plecos ;-) No.....now I'm starting to wonder if it going to snow this year :-) Maybe this will help: ****************************** |
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Even if it ageas over its got to be brighter than black. My water
finaly cleared up but its 6ft deep so it looks like a black hole.I would like to see one. Better hide it from the UV rays. On Sun, 25 Jul 2004 20:39:06 GMT, "volts500" wrote: "how" wrote in message ... You and I are just not going to get along ;-) turtles in a water garden- not me. The turtle came out of nowhere, but there is a nearby drainage ditch/culvert that leads to a retention pond, though. It is welcome to stay along with the other creatures that saunter in :-) I may draw the line at raccoons and herons, though....so far we haven't had them (***). I don't like it when the Bluejays eat the baby treefrogs, either, but the cats help some with that problem. The turtle hasn't caused any problems as of yet. It was very small when it came...about 4" now. Only time will tell. Personally have never seen plecostomus keep pond sides clean and in most cases this would not be wanted if they did. I guess with a "proper" pleco/gallon ratio and the addition of no food it is possible. The last time I had any in a pond that I maintained, they (Hypostomus plecostomus) would surface on their backs and suck the food intended for the goldfish. Ours do that too, but the goldfish get the lion's share. Usually I only feed enough so that the food is gone by the time the Plecos get up to the top.........that's why the wife sneaks out to give them more. I gave up trying to convince her that I _want_ them to be hungry so they will eat the algae instead. Even though she feeds them pellets, they still keep the sides of the pond clean. The polyfiber thing is great. I use it in a portable ex-sand filter along with flocculants to "clear the green pond because we are having a party this weekend" syndrome. They will die when the water is 55/50 degrees F and are very hard to catch to bring in for the winter. There is no doubt that they will die at lower temps and are difficult to catch. Here in central FL they do very well in the wild and in small "ponds", such as mine.. I haven't recorded the water temps. when the air temps. get down into the 30's here, but the Plecos do hang in there. South Florida here and they have floated from cold. They do supposedly inhabit canals in this area and I'm assuming they 'mud it' when it gets cold. Are you one of them new Northern fellers who don't think Fl has winters and have not seen ice on their pond yet ;-) ? Me too, well actually it has been 30+ years here and I've had ice. I've had aquariums for 35 years, but only had a water garden for about 4 or 5 years here. As you know, Winter's have been pretty mild in recent years. We're probably due for some cold. If it gets too cold, I'll drop a heater in there for 'em. I do remember when it snowed in '76, though, and a lot orange groves and strawberries got damaged from the freeze in '84(?). Personally have never seen one sucking on another fish but others have observed this. IMO they are useless in a pond, not the least bit cute and hard to handle. LFS that sell them as 'a must' for ponds are to be avoided. I wouldn't say that they are a must either, however, with a white liner, every little bit helps. Again, from my experience, a _lot_ of scrubbing (a white liner) could be avoided if the right number of Plecos are put in the right size pond. The LFS's in my area that I go to actually told me _not_ to put them in my pond, but then I have been known to raise/breed Discus outside year round here too. snip Well you could teach me something about fish husbandry I'm sure. I don't know anything about Discus did you need heat to do winters with them? You should listen to your LFS ;-) I wouldn't do it again because it's just too hard on them, but, yeah, styrofoam around the tanks and lots of aquarium heaters. Only burnt out one heater. Any citations on gradual introduction of carbon filtration? Some carbon manufacturers will state same right on the box or jar. snip Most ponders don't use white liners either :-) If you know a better, less expensive way to remove the amber tint (tannins), I'm all ears. I'm still puzzled on this one, teach me. What does AC remove that is required for fish? I know it can remove chlorine/chloramines, medications, pesticides, color ---- OK, I forgot that one and carbon will remove the tint and we were talking white liner. That was the only reason that I mentioned the AC, tint. The cost of 1to 3 lbs per 1000 gallons per 1 to 2 months will, IMO, increase the acceptance of a slight yellow tint to most ponders. Agreed. Probably the same for the DE too, if a sizable veggie filter is used for settling. I had assumed that Kathy was looking for pristine, crystal clear water since a white liner was mentioned. Did I at least 'un-superstious' you? I.E. ple*cos - plecos ;-) No.....now I'm starting to wonder if it going to snow this year :-) Maybe this will help: ****************************** |
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