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#1
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Hi all..
Newbie posting here for first time (please be gentle) First off, I've just built a 1000 Gallon pond (not bad considering my garden is so small) but I want to have a water feature flowing into it. However all the ready made Water courses are wrong shape/too big/small, so I got to thinking about expanding foam and liner, making my own... Has anyone done this before?? Will it be better to paint the expanding foam with a rubber compound pond sealant paint? Or cover with a liner? Its not gonna be too huge and will be well supported.. But the fence behind the pond is VERY boring to look at. This pond WILL be populated with fish (koi, Shibunkins (sp) and Sturgeon amongst possible other additions.. (blue orfe seem to be a very likely addition). Now to another Question.. I have some sturgeon (3 off) and the other evening I went out to the garden about 11 pm (pitch dark) and the sturgeon were sticking there whole heads out of the water and making a grunting sound?? This has me worried (they are 2' long each) and are at present in an holding tank (old bath tub) while the pond is sorted. (bath tub having a 3000 gallon filtration system running in it to make sure water stays clean and clear.(including a 15 watt UV clarifier)) pond will be ready for population (excluding the "feature") in a week but the feature will be a removable item so can be made separately from the pond! sorry for the long post, but thought the details MAY be relevant Any help and advice offered will be most helpful.. Lost |
#2
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All I know is, 1,000 gallons is too small for Koi...
Kirsten "Lostin1999" wrote in message ... Hi all.. Newbie posting here for first time (please be gentle) First off, I've just built a 1000 Gallon pond (not bad considering my garden is so small) but I want to have a water feature flowing into it. However all the ready made Water courses are wrong shape/too big/small, so I got to thinking about expanding foam and liner, making my own... Has anyone done this before?? Will it be better to paint the expanding foam with a rubber compound pond sealant paint? Or cover with a liner? Its not gonna be too huge and will be well supported.. But the fence behind the pond is VERY boring to look at. This pond WILL be populated with fish (koi, Shibunkins (sp) and Sturgeon amongst possible other additions.. (blue orfe seem to be a very likely addition). Now to another Question.. I have some sturgeon (3 off) and the other evening I went out to the garden about 11 pm (pitch dark) and the sturgeon were sticking there whole heads out of the water and making a grunting sound?? This has me worried (they are 2' long each) and are at present in an holding tank (old bath tub) while the pond is sorted. (bath tub having a 3000 gallon filtration system running in it to make sure water stays clean and clear.(including a 15 watt UV clarifier)) pond will be ready for population (excluding the "feature") in a week but the feature will be a removable item so can be made separately from the pond! sorry for the long post, but thought the details MAY be relevant Any help and advice offered will be most helpful.. Lost |
#3
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![]() "k conover" wrote in message ... All I know is, 1,000 gallons is too small for Koi... Kirsten snip A generally excepted ratio of Koi to Water is 1,000 gallons for the first Koi and 100 gallons for each additional Koi. So 4 Koi, for example, should be in 1300 gallons of water. The key thing to remember here, is that this is a rule thumb, and nothing more. BV. |
#4
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I know not everyone follows this rule; I've just been told by the owner of a
major water garden designer store/installer that in order for them to thrive (live their full life span, have less disease problems, etc) koi should be in a larger pond. Kirsten "Benign Vanilla" wrote in message ... "k conover" wrote in message ... All I know is, 1,000 gallons is too small for Koi... Kirsten snip A generally excepted ratio of Koi to Water is 1,000 gallons for the first Koi and 100 gallons for each additional Koi. So 4 Koi, for example, should be in 1300 gallons of water. The key thing to remember here, is that this is a rule thumb, and nothing more. BV. |
#5
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![]() "k conover" wrote in message ... I know not everyone follows this rule; I've just been told by the owner of a major water garden designer store/installer that in order for them to thrive (live their full life span, have less disease problems, etc) koi should be in a larger pond. snip Realistically, you could raise Koi in your kitchen sink, if you kept the water clean and free of toxins. The larger bodies of water that we discuss for Koi, a la the 1000+100 gallon rule, is to allow for buffering and chemistry swings. A spawning's worth of Ammonia is much more toxic to a fish 500 gallons then to a fish in 1000 gallons. The 1000+100 gallon rule provides a rule of thumb that assumes you do not have perfect conditions, perfect filtration, etc. BV. |
#6
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Having read many of your posts, I know that you're a pond expert, and I
don't want to start a flame war, but you could raise a child in a closet if you wanted as well, but if you care about the Koi as a living being and not just a water ornament, you would want it to be happy and give it plenty of space in which to swim. Kirsten "Benign Vanilla" wrote in message ... "k conover" wrote in message ... I know not everyone follows this rule; I've just been told by the owner of a major water garden designer store/installer that in order for them to thrive (live their full life span, have less disease problems, etc) koi should be in a larger pond. snip Realistically, you could raise Koi in your kitchen sink, if you kept the water clean and free of toxins. The larger bodies of water that we discuss for Koi, a la the 1000+100 gallon rule, is to allow for buffering and chemistry swings. A spawning's worth of Ammonia is much more toxic to a fish 500 gallons then to a fish in 1000 gallons. The 1000+100 gallon rule provides a rule of thumb that assumes you do not have perfect conditions, perfect filtration, etc. BV. |
#7
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On 6/14/04 10:37 AM, "Benign Vanilla" wrote:
Realistically, you could raise Koi in your kitchen sink, if you kept the water clean and free of toxins. The larger bodies of water that we discuss for Koi, a la the 1000+100 gallon rule, is to allow for buffering and chemistry swings. A spawning's worth of Ammonia is much more toxic to a fish 500 gallons then to a fish in 1000 gallons. The 1000+100 gallon rule provides a rule of thumb that assumes you do not have perfect conditions, perfect filtration, etc. And if I may humbly add, anything over 1,000 gallons is also more likely to provide an adequate swimming depth for Koi, which to my mind would have to be a minimum of three feet. Joe, (who only has gold fish, one Oscar and a turtle.) -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#8
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I have Koi..never have followed that rule... BUT Useing the rule
described below you are saying that you need 1000 gallons of water to succesfully keep one KOI Healthy??? I disagree.... MIKE "Benign Vanilla" wrote in message ... "k conover" wrote in message ... All I know is, 1,000 gallons is too small for Koi... Kirsten snip A generally excepted ratio of Koi to Water is 1,000 gallons for the first Koi and 100 gallons for each additional Koi. So 4 Koi, for example, should be in 1300 gallons of water. The key thing to remember here, is that this is a rule thumb, and nothing more. BV. |
#9
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I too am very new to all of this. I read a very interesting newbie article
once which said "Figure out how many fish your pond can support - then start with 1/10th that." Also read "Pond keeping is not a science it is an art". Ponding is not a formula. There are just too many variables which can frequently change making each pond it's own little learning experience. You will make mistakes - that's a given. Start slowly and your mistakes wont cost you nearly as much in time, money and satisfaction. The bigger the cushion to start the less the bruise in learning. Get to know your pond, your filter, your fish, your unthought of problems. Quarantine all new fish and plants before adding new problems to your pond. Don't start with feeders. These things and more will help to keep new problems from becoming a string of disasters. I say this having not done most of these things, but I sure would do it differently if I had a second chance. Things will be just so much more controlled and happy for everybody and everything. I suspect there are some 'fast track' people who could also add their disasters - but they're no longer ponders. Yes I think the 1000+ rule is probably overstated. I have already seen several EXPERIENCED ponders who have broken it. But if you are soliciting advice and INEXPERIENCED this is probably a very good rule. Start slowly and someday you will probably figure out how to 'break the rules' safely in your own pond with your specific variables, or figured out why you shouldnt. Or if you're like many in this group you'll have a bigger pond and altogether different issues. BTW - I dont know a thing about sturgeon. But my guess is, if they are anything like comets you are on the way to your first three mistakes. Filter not cylced, they got bugs, etc. Bill Brister Austin, Texas |
#10
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I would say that ponding is mostly science. as in we know what will kill koi and try
to avoid that. science tells us how to be very conservative when starting out. what water parameters are needed for healthy fish. how much water, depth etc. is needed for stable pond temperature and "buffer" for when/if things go wrong. in the south the problem is heat, in the north it is ice. aeration, filtration.. why it is needed, what it does. quarantine and why that is important. water and lots of it is the very most important component of keeping fish. if the water can be kept pristine keeping fish is a snap (well unless there is a predator or somebody dumps poison in or around the pond). art is when people knowingly bend or break the rules and get away with it. Ingrid "Newbie Bill" wrote: Also read "Pond keeping is not a science it is an art". Ponding is not a formula. There are just too many variables which can frequently change making each pond it's own little learning experience. You will make mistakes - that's a given. Start slowly and your mistakes wont cost you nearly as much in time, money and satisfaction. The bigger the cushion to start the less the bruise in learning. Get to know your pond, your filter, your fish, your unthought of problems. Quarantine all new fish and plants before adding new problems to your pond. Don't start with feeders. These things and more will help to keep new problems from becoming a string of disasters. I say this having not done most of these things, but I sure would do it differently if I had a second chance. Things will be just so much more controlled and happy for everybody and everything. I suspect there are some 'fast track' people who could also add their disasters - but they're no longer ponders. Yes I think the 1000+ rule is probably overstated. I have already seen several EXPERIENCED ponders who have broken it. But if you are soliciting advice and INEXPERIENCED this is probably a very good rule. Start slowly and someday you will probably figure out how to 'break the rules' safely in your own pond with your specific variables, or figured out why you shouldnt. Or if you're like many in this group you'll have a bigger pond and altogether different issues. BTW - I dont know a thing about sturgeon. But my guess is, if they are anything like comets you are on the way to your first three mistakes. Filter not cylced, they got bugs, etc. Bill Brister Austin, Texas ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 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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