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#1
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![]() "ken" wrote in message s.com... I am in the midst of making my own pond filter. I was going to use charcoal brickets from the barbeque. A friend advised me to be careful. Does anyone out there know if this is a good idea or not? If not, what are the possible substitutes? Thanks for all your help. -- Charcoal briquets are just dust charcoal held together with some kind of glue - personaally I think they make food taste funny so I never use them & I certainly wouldn't put them in a pond filter - I would have thought they'd disintegrate. The easiest/cheapest thing to do is to get some of that black corrugated hose they sell for pond pipework - about 1/2 or 3/4" dia should do. Chop it up into pieces an inch or so long and stick them in the filter. All you are looking for is as much surface area for bacteria to grow on as possible but without making it so dense that the filter will clog. I've read of people using chopped up drinking straws - but I think it would be quite a loabour intensive thing to try & do! I. |
#2
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On Fri, 01 Aug 2003 22:55:03 GMT, ken
wrote: I am in the midst of making my own pond filter. I was going to use charcoal brickets from the barbeque. A friend advised me to be careful. Does anyone out there know if this is a good idea or not? If not, what are the possible substitutes? Thanks for all your help. A biofilter is simply a place for bacteria to grow on a surface. A material that could be rinsed of algae and dead stuff would be more practical. There are filters with broken clay pots, bio balls, plastic pieces of a number of description that work well. Charcoal and things that absorb ammonia worry me because some of those things saturate and release the ammonia back into the pond under some conditions. Regards, Hal |
#3
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![]() "ken" wrote in message s.com... I am in the midst of making my own pond filter. I was going to use charcoal brickets from the barbeque. A friend advised me to be careful. Does anyone out there know if this is a good idea or not? If not, what are the possible substitutes? Thanks for all your help. I am going to attempt to start a new elist trend here on rec.ponds and suggest you abandon the SILLY idea of a bio-mechanical filter, and build a VF. VF'ers rule. The yahoo's on this group with bio-mechanical filters are just sadist that like doing too much work. BV. tee hee...that should ruffle some feather...seemed like a fun troll...ooh...I am trolling rec.ponds. So much fun? *laugh* You guys know I am kidding. |
#4
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BV,
Your VF is a combination bio-mechanical and veggie filter. The roots on the plants act as strainers for the mechanical filtration, and they also act as surfaces, along with the liner, any submerged rocks, etc. as a place for the bacteria of the biological filtration. Then they also remove the nutrients created by the bio filter. A nice large filter needs little cleaning, but you do have plans to vacuum out the veggie filter once or twice a year, don't you? It is a matter of size. -- RichToyBox http://www.geocities.com/richtoybox/pondintro.html "BenignVanilla" wrote in message ... "ken" wrote in message s.com... I am in the midst of making my own pond filter. I was going to use charcoal brickets from the barbeque. A friend advised me to be careful. Does anyone out there know if this is a good idea or not? If not, what are the possible substitutes? Thanks for all your help. I am going to attempt to start a new elist trend here on rec.ponds and suggest you abandon the SILLY idea of a bio-mechanical filter, and build a VF. VF'ers rule. The yahoo's on this group with bio-mechanical filters are just sadist that like doing too much work. BV. tee hee...that should ruffle some feather...seemed like a fun troll...ooh...I am trolling rec.ponds. So much fun? *laugh* You guys know I am kidding. |
#5
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![]() "RichToyBox" wrote in message news:qmhXa.41805$cF.15683@rwcrnsc53... BV, Your VF is a combination bio-mechanical and veggie filter. The roots on the plants act as strainers for the mechanical filtration, and they also act as surfaces, along with the liner, any submerged rocks, etc. as a place for the bacteria of the biological filtration. Then they also remove the nutrients created by the bio filter. A nice large filter needs little cleaning, but you do have plans to vacuum out the veggie filter once or twice a year, don't you? It is a matter of size. snip Shhh...Don't ruin my fun. BV. |
#6
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![]() BenignVanilla wrote: "ken" wrote in message s.com... I am in the midst of making my own pond filter. I was going to use charcoal brickets from the barbeque. A friend advised me to be careful. Does anyone out there know if this is a good idea or not? If not, what are the possible substitutes? Thanks for all your help. I am going to attempt to start a new elist trend here on rec.ponds and suggest you abandon the SILLY idea of a bio-mechanical filter, and build a VF. VF'ers rule. The yahoo's on this group with bio-mechanical filters are just sadist that like doing too much work. BV. tee hee...that should ruffle some feather...seemed like a fun troll...ooh...I am trolling rec.ponds. So much fun? *laugh* You guys know I am kidding. -- ok now we need another terminology thingy----- a bog without dirt and with plants in pots is a veggie filter ,,, we did that one a bog with mostly dirt is still a bog we left that alone bio mechanical filters self explanatory so now what do we call a container with filter media and plants ???? John Rutz Z5 New Mexico never miss a good oportunity to shut up see my pond at: http://www.fuerjefe.com |
#7
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If we want to get really technical a bog is a body of water through which no
water moves. The frog bog is a bog. And when Heidi goes tromping through it and gets covered in bog mud --- oh-my-gawd, the smell is out of this world. The mud and mulm that is caught in the mech/bio/veggie filter for the pond smells river sweet when we clean it. k30a and the watergardening labradors http://www.geocities.com/watergarden...ors/index.html |
#8
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When I start this thread I didn't realize the response it would create.
I think it is wonderful. My idea of a pond is to create a natural environment where you do not have to look at ph levels or add chemicals to adjust for nitrites or nitrates. That is why I thought a skippy filter was the answer. I made a 250 gallon pond in early July. I t is a birthday present for my wife. I put in several plants, both on the surface and on the bottom. I then added a dozen feeder gold fish. A week later I added my version of the skippy. I am using a pump that moves 170 gallons per hour. I made a 1 1/2 foot water fall. I t has been over a month since I added the filter. My fish are growing, My plants are healthy. And my water is pretty good. I can see the bottom (2 feet). I have no idea what the chemical makeup of the water is. Nor do I care. All I put into the pond is fish food and water to replace evaporation. The fish are just starting to know when feeding time is and come to meet me. This is what creating a pond is all about. I live on Vancouver Island in Canada (zone 8a). To me this is the closest thing I can get to a natural pond. All the ideas I got for how to create this pond came from this chat group. Thank you for all your advise on how to do things and how not to do things. To e-mail see website [/b] -- ken ------------------------------------------------------------------------ posted via www.GardenBanter.co.uk |
#9
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"ken" wrote in message
ws.com... I am in the midst of making my own pond filter. I was going to use charcoal brickets from the barbeque. A friend advised me to be careful. Does anyone out there know if this is a good idea or not? If not, what are the possible substitutes? Thanks for all your help. I am going to attempt to start a new elist trend here on rec.ponds and suggest you abandon the SILLY idea of a bio-mechanical filter, and build a VF. VF'ers rule. The yahoo's on this group with bio-mechanical filters are just sadist that like doing too much work. BV. tee hee...that should ruffle some feather...seemed like a fun troll...ooh...I am trolling rec.ponds. So much fun? *laugh* You guys know I am kidding. Kidding aside, you young pond whipper snapper, you'll be speaking another tune when you REALLY get into maintenance this fall. Assuming you follow our directions. ;o) ~ jan See my ponds and filter design: http://users.owt.com/jjspond/ ~Keep 'em Wet!~ Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
#10
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"~ jan JJsPond.us" wrote in message
... "ken" wrote in message ws.com... I am in the midst of making my own pond filter. I was going to use charcoal brickets from the barbeque. A friend advised me to be careful. Does anyone out there know if this is a good idea or not? If not, what are the possible substitutes? Thanks for all your help. I am going to attempt to start a new elist trend here on rec.ponds and suggest you abandon the SILLY idea of a bio-mechanical filter, and build a VF. VF'ers rule. The yahoo's on this group with bio-mechanical filters are just sadist that like doing too much work. BV. tee hee...that should ruffle some feather...seemed like a fun troll...ooh...I am trolling rec.ponds. So much fun? *laugh* You guys know I am kidding. Kidding aside, you young pond whipper snapper, you'll be speaking another tune when you REALLY get into maintenance this fall. Assuming you follow our directions. ;o) ~ jan snip If my bottom drain does it's job, I should only need to clean out my VF which is very easy since it is shallow. My only concern is that I to date put off putting my diffuser on, so I know my BD is not being as effective as it could be. I realize I am green, but that won't stop me from being a smart a$$. All in good fun, I certainly would not be so bold as to think I could run with you big dogs. At least not until next year...if I come out of the winter with living fish and a healthy pond, I'll ratchet my tude up a few notches. Next year, I may even get involved in the salt wars. For now, I will go back and not mess with my pond. BV. |
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