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#1
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Not sure if this is an original idea or not, but I am pretty impressed with
results, so I thought I would post it. I decided not to net my pond last fall so I could see how bad it would get, and to see how bad the cleaning would be. I have TONS of leaves in the pond, as would be expected. The cleaning as not been too difficult, but it will be some work. I have gotten a lot out so far, and the water is just about gin clear already. Yesterday, I decided to take a smallish (200 gph or so) pump...I placed it in the shallows of the pond with the output pointing towards the edge of the pond. This very quickly got a small whirlpool going in the pond. The minnows love the current, BTW. Anyway, all of the debris, leaves, etc. are all collecting behind one of the containers I have plants in, and they are all at the bottom of the pond! Instead of cleaning Everywhere, I now have a small area where the leaves and such are all densely piled. It's making cleaning a lot easier. -- BenignVanilla www.iheartmypond.com Do you want to supplement your income with a stay at home job, AND help the environment? Check www.AMothersDream.com |
#2
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Great idea you WHIPPED UP. It works in a swimming pool, but never
thought of it for the pond. Hmmmm? "BenignVanilla" wrote in message ... Not sure if this is an original idea or not, but I am pretty impressed with results, so I thought I would post it. I decided not to net my pond last fall so I could see how bad it would get, and to see how bad the cleaning would be. I have TONS of leaves in the pond, as would be expected. The cleaning as not been too difficult, but it will be some work. I have gotten a lot out so far, and the water is just about gin clear already. Yesterday, I decided to take a smallish (200 gph or so) pump...I placed it in the shallows of the pond with the output pointing towards the edge of the pond. This very quickly got a small whirlpool going in the pond. The minnows love the current, BTW. Anyway, all of the debris, leaves, etc. are all collecting behind one of the containers I have plants in, and they are all at the bottom of the pond! Instead of cleaning Everywhere, I now have a small area where the leaves and such are all densely piled. It's making cleaning a lot easier. -- BenignVanilla www.iheartmypond.com Do you want to supplement your income with a stay at home job, AND help the environment? Check www.AMothersDream.com |
#3
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Great idea you WHIPPED UP. It works in a swimming pool, but never
thought of it for the pond. Hmmmm? "BenignVanilla" wrote in message ... Not sure if this is an original idea or not, but I am pretty impressed with results, so I thought I would post it. I decided not to net my pond last fall so I could see how bad it would get, and to see how bad the cleaning would be. I have TONS of leaves in the pond, as would be expected. The cleaning as not been too difficult, but it will be some work. I have gotten a lot out so far, and the water is just about gin clear already. Yesterday, I decided to take a smallish (200 gph or so) pump...I placed it in the shallows of the pond with the output pointing towards the edge of the pond. This very quickly got a small whirlpool going in the pond. The minnows love the current, BTW. Anyway, all of the debris, leaves, etc. are all collecting behind one of the containers I have plants in, and they are all at the bottom of the pond! Instead of cleaning Everywhere, I now have a small area where the leaves and such are all densely piled. It's making cleaning a lot easier. -- BenignVanilla www.iheartmypond.com Do you want to supplement your income with a stay at home job, AND help the environment? Check www.AMothersDream.com |
#4
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Congratulations on your vortex pond idea! Our pond is not shaped for that
technique (looks like a tooth...two legs). Our 'deep well' (read old septic tank!) gathers the junk as the koi brush it along and the pump is in the bottom of the deep well. We did drain the berm veggie filters. Lots of muck in the first, some inthe second, almost none in the third. Easy with 2" bottom drains. May your pond stay clear, BV. Jim -- ______________________________________________ See our pond at: home.bellsouth.net\p\pwp-jameshurley Check out Jog-A-Thon fundraiser (clears $140+ per child) at: jogathon.net ______________________________________________ "BenignVanilla" wrote in message ... Not sure if this is an original idea or not, but I am pretty impressed with results, so I thought I would post it. I decided not to net my pond last fall so I could see how bad it would get, and to see how bad the cleaning would be. I have TONS of leaves in the pond, as would be expected. The cleaning as not been too difficult, but it will be some work. I have gotten a lot out so far, and the water is just about gin clear already. Yesterday, I decided to take a smallish (200 gph or so) pump...I placed it in the shallows of the pond with the output pointing towards the edge of the pond. This very quickly got a small whirlpool going in the pond. The minnows love the current, BTW. Anyway, all of the debris, leaves, etc. are all collecting behind one of the containers I have plants in, and they are all at the bottom of the pond! Instead of cleaning Everywhere, I now have a small area where the leaves and such are all densely piled. It's making cleaning a lot easier. -- BenignVanilla www.iheartmypond.com Do you want to supplement your income with a stay at home job, AND help the environment? Check www.AMothersDream.com |
#5
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Congratulations on your vortex pond idea! Our pond is not shaped for that
technique (looks like a tooth...two legs). Our 'deep well' (read old septic tank!) gathers the junk as the koi brush it along and the pump is in the bottom of the deep well. We did drain the berm veggie filters. Lots of muck in the first, some inthe second, almost none in the third. Easy with 2" bottom drains. May your pond stay clear, BV. Jim -- ______________________________________________ See our pond at: home.bellsouth.net\p\pwp-jameshurley Check out Jog-A-Thon fundraiser (clears $140+ per child) at: jogathon.net ______________________________________________ "BenignVanilla" wrote in message ... Not sure if this is an original idea or not, but I am pretty impressed with results, so I thought I would post it. I decided not to net my pond last fall so I could see how bad it would get, and to see how bad the cleaning would be. I have TONS of leaves in the pond, as would be expected. The cleaning as not been too difficult, but it will be some work. I have gotten a lot out so far, and the water is just about gin clear already. Yesterday, I decided to take a smallish (200 gph or so) pump...I placed it in the shallows of the pond with the output pointing towards the edge of the pond. This very quickly got a small whirlpool going in the pond. The minnows love the current, BTW. Anyway, all of the debris, leaves, etc. are all collecting behind one of the containers I have plants in, and they are all at the bottom of the pond! Instead of cleaning Everywhere, I now have a small area where the leaves and such are all densely piled. It's making cleaning a lot easier. -- BenignVanilla www.iheartmypond.com Do you want to supplement your income with a stay at home job, AND help the environment? Check www.AMothersDream.com |
#6
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Here in the Northeast, I think your plan would result in many deceased fish.
We had over 20 inches of ice over our pond in the middle of the coldest part of winter. I had to cut holes using an ice auger just to allow the pond to vent. I would be very concerned that the decomposing leaves would substantially elevate the poisons in the water. I used a leaf vac in the fall before the serious leaf drop, then built a hoop house and suspended leaf netting over that. It worked great at keeping the leaves off. I am happy to report that all of my fish survived (unlike last winter when I had a half dozen fish pops). MSK "BenignVanilla" wrote in message ... Not sure if this is an original idea or not, but I am pretty impressed with results, so I thought I would post it. I decided not to net my pond last fall so I could see how bad it would get, and to see how bad the cleaning would be. I have TONS of leaves in the pond, as would be expected. The cleaning as not been too difficult, but it will be some work. I have gotten a lot out so far, and the water is just about gin clear already. Yesterday, I decided to take a smallish (200 gph or so) pump...I placed it in the shallows of the pond with the output pointing towards the edge of the pond. This very quickly got a small whirlpool going in the pond. The minnows love the current, BTW. Anyway, all of the debris, leaves, etc. are all collecting behind one of the containers I have plants in, and they are all at the bottom of the pond! Instead of cleaning Everywhere, I now have a small area where the leaves and such are all densely piled. It's making cleaning a lot easier. -- BenignVanilla www.iheartmypond.com Do you want to supplement your income with a stay at home job, AND help the environment? Check www.AMothersDream.com |
#7
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![]() "Remydog" wrote in message news:t1o9c.19452$w54.139094@attbi_s01... Here in the Northeast, I think your plan would result in many deceased fish. We had over 20 inches of ice over our pond in the middle of the coldest part of winter. I had to cut holes using an ice auger just to allow the pond to vent. I would be very concerned that the decomposing leaves would substantially elevate the poisons in the water. I used a leaf vac in the fall before the serious leaf drop, then built a hoop house and suspended leaf netting over that. It worked great at keeping the leaves off. I am happy to report that all of my fish survived (unlike last winter when I had a half dozen fish pops). snip I am near Baltimore, so I'd consider myself a NE'er. I too had to work to keep a hole in the ice this winter. I used a pump, squirting straight up in the shallows of the pond to achieve this. I am considering netting the pond next year, but for this year, I wanted to see what kind of leaf load I would get. It was a lot, but surprisingly not as bad as I expected. *shrug* For now, the whirlpool effect is making it easier to collect the leaves. One of these days, I'll have to get in there and do it by hand, but not for another few degrees or so. -- BV. www.iheartmypond.com |
#8
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![]() "Remydog" wrote in message news:t1o9c.19452$w54.139094@attbi_s01... Here in the Northeast, I think your plan would result in many deceased fish. We had over 20 inches of ice over our pond in the middle of the coldest part of winter. I had to cut holes using an ice auger just to allow the pond to vent. I would be very concerned that the decomposing leaves would substantially elevate the poisons in the water. I used a leaf vac in the fall before the serious leaf drop, then built a hoop house and suspended leaf netting over that. It worked great at keeping the leaves off. I am happy to report that all of my fish survived (unlike last winter when I had a half dozen fish pops). snip I am near Baltimore, so I'd consider myself a NE'er. I too had to work to keep a hole in the ice this winter. I used a pump, squirting straight up in the shallows of the pond to achieve this. I am considering netting the pond next year, but for this year, I wanted to see what kind of leaf load I would get. It was a lot, but surprisingly not as bad as I expected. *shrug* For now, the whirlpool effect is making it easier to collect the leaves. One of these days, I'll have to get in there and do it by hand, but not for another few degrees or so. -- BV. www.iheartmypond.com |
#9
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Here in the Northeast, I think your plan would result in many deceased fish.
We had over 20 inches of ice over our pond in the middle of the coldest part of winter. I had to cut holes using an ice auger just to allow the pond to vent. I would be very concerned that the decomposing leaves would substantially elevate the poisons in the water. I used a leaf vac in the fall before the serious leaf drop, then built a hoop house and suspended leaf netting over that. It worked great at keeping the leaves off. I am happy to report that all of my fish survived (unlike last winter when I had a half dozen fish pops). MSK "BenignVanilla" wrote in message ... Not sure if this is an original idea or not, but I am pretty impressed with results, so I thought I would post it. I decided not to net my pond last fall so I could see how bad it would get, and to see how bad the cleaning would be. I have TONS of leaves in the pond, as would be expected. The cleaning as not been too difficult, but it will be some work. I have gotten a lot out so far, and the water is just about gin clear already. Yesterday, I decided to take a smallish (200 gph or so) pump...I placed it in the shallows of the pond with the output pointing towards the edge of the pond. This very quickly got a small whirlpool going in the pond. The minnows love the current, BTW. Anyway, all of the debris, leaves, etc. are all collecting behind one of the containers I have plants in, and they are all at the bottom of the pond! Instead of cleaning Everywhere, I now have a small area where the leaves and such are all densely piled. It's making cleaning a lot easier. -- BenignVanilla www.iheartmypond.com Do you want to supplement your income with a stay at home job, AND help the environment? Check www.AMothersDream.com |
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