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![]() kathy wrote: What area of the country do you live in? It might be too early to start up a pond and add fish. Fish in water 55 degrees and lower aren't doing much of anything except hanging around and snoozing the winter away. What you don't want to do is buy goldfish from the pet store and move them outdoors if the temperature from where they were living to your pond is too great a drop. Which is why waiting until spring when you can move the fish with about a ten degree difference in temperatures. Also can you estimate how many gallons your pond is? That will give you an estimate on what your stocking level should be. Rule of thumb is 20 to 40 gallons per goldfish. Going with the higher figure is your best bet. Too many fish in too little of water causes all sorts of water quality problems. Keeping your stocking level low is a good way to start learning and will help keep your water from going green. Which brings me to plants. Did the owners let you know about the plants in the pond. More plants the better for fish health all around. Do the plants in the pond need to be cleaned up and trimmed up? A spring chore you can get out of the way before adding fish. Turning on the pump and getting the filter running before adding fish should be your first task also (given you a lot of first tasks here...) The filtering bio bugs won't get started until the water temps stay above 40ish degrees. If you are way up north, like I am, pond season is not even in the picture. If you are in Florida, that's another story ;-) kathy It might be best to drain the pond and clean the mulm[muck] from the bottom then you will know what you have. Take a 5 gallon bucket, time how long it takes to fill it and time the filling of the pond. This way you will know the gallons when treating pond and the fish. Do not clean the sides but clean the pump and filter[rinse out the materials.] Place the pump several inches off the bottom on some bricks. My pump is clam-shelled in two baskets in a bag made of fiberglass window screen and surrounded with Walmarts blue trimmable furnace filter material. Fill the pond and add dechlor if you are in the city and planning to add fish. You should purchase a few books by Helen Nash-Low-Maintenance Water Gardens and The Pond Doctor. It would be helpful to read the site by Chuck Rush for beginners. http://www.pondrushes.net/ Happy water Gardening. |
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