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while it can be city/county spraying that is the problem many are using Bti which is
not toxic for fish. it is the neighbor next door or the "for hire" sprayers like for termites that overspray (stupid neighbors, cheap labor). I talked to people on both sides about not spraying anything without telling me. unfortunately, the "natural" insecticides... pyrethrin are extremely toxic to fish whereas synthetics like malathion are less so. often it is the "carriers" in the pesticides that are very toxic, like naptha based carriers. Ingrid ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
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"Cam" wrote in message
... Cam Nice to see another Cameron *handshakes* ![]() -- **So long, and thanks for all the fish!** |
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Most likely this isn't your problem, but last year I lost some fish
(GF) just before my pump died. I suspect that it overheated/cracked and leaked something into the water. After it quit and I replaced the pump with a new one, fish seemed to survive fine. If your pump is still running fine, I'm not sure how you might check it though. Jerry "rasta" wrote in message news ![]() thought i would draw on the collective wisdom of this group. i have a 300g inground pond with a 45 mil liner that has been running since april of this year. it has a 950g/hr mag pump with the discharge split into a venturi and a bioforce 1000 bio-mechanical filter. it has been home to 6 - 5 inch comets during this time with no probs. been doing 10% wcs monthly and did a 20% wc 3 weeks ago when i cleaned the filter pads (rinsing the pads in water taken from pond for the wc). i use amquel+ for water top offs and wcs (treating the water taken up in 30g plastic containers and aerating before adding to the pond). the pond sits under a patio cover in the back yard and is shaded throughout the day. the prob: i lost 4 fish in the last 12 hrs. with no signs of flashing or abnormal behavior. the four started going belly up within hours of one another. as i saw signs of them struggling to hang on (swimming erratically, etc, as dying fish do) i placed them in a 30g container with freshly conditioned water and a powerhead for circulation. they died hours apart. ran tests at first sign of distress: nh3- 0 no2 - 0 no3 - 10 pH - 7.8 i keep fresh and salt tanks and know losing fish sometimes happens. but i only lose 1 every so often - never a fish kill like this. i think i've done everything right (including adding a large bag of well rinsed activated carbon to the return of the pond last night to remove possible pollutants). i just looked in on the remaining two and they're swimming around fine - no signs of distress. i know this is long but am hoping to get some possiblities of what happened. |
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On Fri, 10 Sep 2004 14:21:18 GMT, "Jerry Donovan"
wrote: Most likely this isn't your problem, but last year I lost some fish (GF) just before my pump died. I suspect that it overheated/cracked and leaked something into the water. After it quit and I replaced the pump with a new one, fish seemed to survive fine. If your pump is still running fine, I'm not sure how you might check it though. Jerry jerry the pump used is a supreme mag drive - supposed to be oil free, which is why i chose it. i had read of events like yours happening in the past, tho. glad to hear you solved your prob. positive vibes, rasta http://rynholland.tripod.com/ http://rynholland.tripod.com/pond/id2.html http://rynholland.tripod.com/pond/id1.html |
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no no no no no no no
ponds sit for a year before you put fish in. You don't have to faff around with chemical this and that, you let the pond just sit there for a year (at least) to sort out its own chemistry "rasta" wrote in message news ![]() thought i would draw on the collective wisdom of this group. i have a 300g inground pond with a 45 mil liner that has been running since april of this year. it has a 950g/ |
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May I respectfully suggest a year is way overkill. That's almost like
saying the best way to enjoy your next sex is to wait a year. In both cases I am sure this would work, but what a price to pay. I doubt that most people are willing to go to the potentially back breaking work of digging a pond, put out the investment, gather the plants, get everything set up and then say I think I'll wait a year before I enjoy any fish. Someone suggested on a couple of fish, particularly given the season. This makes sense. Waiting till spring and your biofilter is up before doing any slow quarantined stocking. This makes sense. I am still in the tail end of my first year. Personally I would be ****ed if I found out later that I missed a whole year of the immense enjoyment I have gotten from my fish, just to err on the side of caution. Yes I have had a few problems and very unfortunately a few fish died. But 5 or 6 months into it everything was and is pretty much stable, clear and healthy. This group, I think can guide many or most people rather than just sitting a waiting a whole year. We may never know whether rasta did everything perfectly and it was just a chance event that has caused his problem. The same thing could happen a year from now, if it is not a balanced pond issue. So I say yes, go slowly and carefully particularly at first, but not that slow. Bill Brister - Austin, Texas "Oxymel of Squill" wrote in message ... no no no no no no no ponds sit for a year before you put fish in. You don't have to faff around with chemical this and that, you let the pond just sit there for a year (at least) to sort out its own chemistry "rasta" wrote in message news ![]() thought i would draw on the collective wisdom of this group. i have a 300g inground pond with a 45 mil liner that has been running since april of this year. it has a 950g/ |
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May I respectfully suggest a year is way overkill. That's almost like
saying the best way to enjoy your next sex is to wait a year. ROTFLOL!!! I doubt that most people are willing Willing? Why should they be when so many of us on this group have had success and we sure didn't wait a year. I bet there are some on here that didn't even make it to the end of the day of filling, and their fish survived in spite of. ;o) Someone suggested on a couple of fish, particularly given the season. That would be me. It's a low recommendation, if I say 2, hopefully they'll only get 4. ;o) Saying that though, I'm really hoping they'll only get TWO!!! ~ jan ~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~ |
#8
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Newbie Bill wrote:
May I respectfully suggest a year is way overkill. That's almost like saying the best way to enjoy your next sex is to wait a year. In both Ack! Please. I agree with you, but lets not be extreme with the examples. That's just too scary to contemplate! I am sure this would work, but what a price to pay. I doubt that most people are willing to go to the potentially back breaking work of digging a pond, put out the investment, gather the plants, get everything set up and then say I think I'll wait a year before I enjoy any fish. Yes, slow and steady is the key. otoh, it depends on the quality of your fish too. If all you keep is feeder goldfish to control mosquitos, you can skip quarantine, anyway. -- derek |
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On Fri, 10 Sep 2004 17:11:35 +0100, "Oxymel of Squill"
wrote: no no no no no no no ponds sit for a year before you put fish in. You don't have to faff around with chemical this and that, you let the pond just sit there for a year (at least) to sort out its own chemistry ??????????? did you look at pics of my pond in my sig? it's a "formal" pond - not a farm pond where you may wait for grasses to cultivate to achieve a natural form of filtration. the pond has never been dosed with chemicals. the only chems ever added has been to remove chloramines at wcs. positive vibes, rasta http://rynholland.tripod.com/ http://rynholland.tripod.com/pond/id2.html http://rynholland.tripod.com/pond/id1.html |
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