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#1
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Does a good veggie filter provide sediment filtration? If not, can it
be easily and low maintenance (ly) included? I have a 500 gallon that is over stocked, and have to travel for work so sometimes a week will go by witout picking out the leaves. Apparantly it was pretty windy while i was gone, and a lot of leaves settled or got sucked up making for fine debris in the pond... My current filtration is a Fluidized Sand Filter (works amazing and home built), a UV attached to that. and a seperate lava rock filter (trash can filled with lava rock). thanks to all for any advice -- -- http://www.cobaltbluefilms.com |
#2
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Carl Beyer wrote:
Does a good veggie filter provide sediment filtration? If not, can it be easily and low maintenance (ly) included? I have a 500 gallon that is over stocked, and have to travel for work so sometimes a week will go by witout picking out the leaves. Apparantly it was pretty windy while i was gone, and a lot of leaves settled or got sucked up making for fine debris in the pond... My current filtration is a Fluidized Sand Filter (works amazing and home built), a UV attached to that. and a seperate lava rock filter (trash can filled with lava rock). thanks to all for any advice My veggie filter is 700 gallons. The first stage is filled with polyester screening (like window screen) and that does the mechanical filtration. The water from 2 ponds goes into this, then the water flows through the plants and then finally it enters the bioballs. From there it flows back into the upper pond. -- Bonnie NJ http://home.earthlink.net/~maebe43/ |
#3
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Carl Beyer wrote:
Does a good veggie filter provide sediment filtration? If not, can it be easily and low maintenance (ly) included? I have a 500 gallon that is over stocked, and have to travel for work so sometimes a week will go by witout picking out the leaves. Apparantly it was pretty windy while i was gone, and a lot of leaves settled or got sucked up making for fine debris in the pond... My current filtration is a Fluidized Sand Filter (works amazing and home built), a UV attached to that. and a seperate lava rock filter (trash can filled with lava rock). thanks to all for any advice My veggie filter is 700 gallons. The first stage is filled with polyester screening (like window screen) and that does the mechanical filtration. The water from 2 ponds goes into this, then the water flows through the plants and then finally it enters the bioballs. From there it flows back into the upper pond. -- Bonnie NJ http://home.earthlink.net/~maebe43/ |
#4
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you can if you want. I have a big roll of course filter material which slows the
speed of the flowing water and the crud drops out. I think it helps that my veggie filter is long. I use a wet/dry vac to suck out the collected mulm in fall just after I stop the veggie filter. if the pump wont move the leaves into the filter of course, it wont filter them out. Ingrid Carl Beyer wrote: Does a good veggie filter provide sediment filtration? If not, can it be easily and low maintenance (ly) included? I have a 500 gallon that is over stocked, and have to travel for work so sometimes a week will go by witout picking out the leaves. Apparantly it was pretty windy while i was gone, and a lot of leaves settled or got sucked up making for fine debris in the pond... My current filtration is a Fluidized Sand Filter (works amazing and home built), a UV attached to that. and a seperate lava rock filter (trash can filled with lava rock). thanks to all for any advice ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 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. |
#5
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you can if you want. I have a big roll of course filter material which slows the
speed of the flowing water and the crud drops out. I think it helps that my veggie filter is long. I use a wet/dry vac to suck out the collected mulm in fall just after I stop the veggie filter. if the pump wont move the leaves into the filter of course, it wont filter them out. Ingrid Carl Beyer wrote: Does a good veggie filter provide sediment filtration? If not, can it be easily and low maintenance (ly) included? I have a 500 gallon that is over stocked, and have to travel for work so sometimes a week will go by witout picking out the leaves. Apparantly it was pretty windy while i was gone, and a lot of leaves settled or got sucked up making for fine debris in the pond... My current filtration is a Fluidized Sand Filter (works amazing and home built), a UV attached to that. and a seperate lava rock filter (trash can filled with lava rock). thanks to all for any advice ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 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. |
#6
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![]() "Carl Beyer" wrote in message ... Does a good veggie filter provide sediment filtration? If not, can it be easily and low maintenance (ly) included? I have a 500 gallon that is over stocked, and have to travel for work so sometimes a week will go by witout picking out the leaves. Apparantly it was pretty windy while i was gone, and a lot of leaves settled or got sucked up making for fine debris in the pond... My current filtration is a Fluidized Sand Filter (works amazing and home built), a UV attached to that. and a seperate lava rock filter (trash can filled with lava rock). snip My VF is actually two smaller ponds. The first pond is gravity fed by my bottom drain. The pump is in this pond, and pumps water UP to a larger ponder which overflows to a stream back to the main pond. I do not use any filter media other then the plants and the baskets full of rocks that they are planted in. My VF is only 16 inches deep or so at the deepest point, and both of the small ponds are bowl shaped. The bowl shape is a bit difficult to work with from a potted plant POV, but it really helps with the sediment getting collected in the middle. Makes for easy cleanup. This time of year my VF is way ugly, nothing as nice as Ingrid's. I have a lot of liner showing and most everything is dead around it. But as the plants grow in, in the VF, and around the VF and the ones around VF crawl into the VF, the whole area becomes quite beautiful. Where was I? Oh yeah sediment. The long, narrow, shallow VF will by design cause a lot of sediment to fall out. I am sure some filter media would help, but I bet with just a healthy dose of plants, you'd be fine too. -- BV. www.iheartmypond.com |
#7
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![]() "Carl Beyer" wrote in message ... Does a good veggie filter provide sediment filtration? If not, can it be easily and low maintenance (ly) included? I have a 500 gallon that is over stocked, and have to travel for work so sometimes a week will go by witout picking out the leaves. Apparantly it was pretty windy while i was gone, and a lot of leaves settled or got sucked up making for fine debris in the pond... My current filtration is a Fluidized Sand Filter (works amazing and home built), a UV attached to that. and a seperate lava rock filter (trash can filled with lava rock). snip My VF is actually two smaller ponds. The first pond is gravity fed by my bottom drain. The pump is in this pond, and pumps water UP to a larger ponder which overflows to a stream back to the main pond. I do not use any filter media other then the plants and the baskets full of rocks that they are planted in. My VF is only 16 inches deep or so at the deepest point, and both of the small ponds are bowl shaped. The bowl shape is a bit difficult to work with from a potted plant POV, but it really helps with the sediment getting collected in the middle. Makes for easy cleanup. This time of year my VF is way ugly, nothing as nice as Ingrid's. I have a lot of liner showing and most everything is dead around it. But as the plants grow in, in the VF, and around the VF and the ones around VF crawl into the VF, the whole area becomes quite beautiful. Where was I? Oh yeah sediment. The long, narrow, shallow VF will by design cause a lot of sediment to fall out. I am sure some filter media would help, but I bet with just a healthy dose of plants, you'd be fine too. -- BV. www.iheartmypond.com |
#8
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thanks to all for the advice.. It sounds like a pleasant and productive
idea to put in a veggie filter, so maybe it will be this summers project. Thanks again Carl -- -- http://www.cobaltbluefilms.com |
#9
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thanks to all for the advice.. It sounds like a pleasant and productive
idea to put in a veggie filter, so maybe it will be this summers project. Thanks again Carl -- -- http://www.cobaltbluefilms.com |
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