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#1
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HI,
My filter seems to soon fill with a browny green sludge. Should I clean it or will cleaning it destroy the bacteria i need? |
#2
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![]() "david williams" wrote in message ... HI, My filter seems to soon fill with a browny green sludge. Should I clean it or will cleaning it destroy the bacteria i need? Take a bucket and fill it with some of the pond water. Rinse it out with some of this water. Don't use tap water. |
#3
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I've been using tap water for a decade and never had bad results.
-- Don "George" wrote in message .. . "david williams" wrote in message ... HI, My filter seems to soon fill with a browny green sludge. Should I clean it or will cleaning it destroy the bacteria i need? Take a bucket and fill it with some of the pond water. Rinse it out with some of this water. Don't use tap water. |
#4
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![]() "Don" dbitzerATcomcastDOTnet wrote in message ... I've been using tap water for a decade and never had bad results. -- Don You will likely get better results if you don't. Is your tap water chlorinated? "George" wrote in message .. . "david williams" wrote in message ... HI, My filter seems to soon fill with a browny green sludge. Should I clean it or will cleaning it destroy the bacteria i need? Take a bucket and fill it with some of the pond water. Rinse it out with some of this water. Don't use tap water. |
#5
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Yes, it is. Large colonies of bacteria reappear within days.
-- Don "George" wrote in message .. . "Don" dbitzerATcomcastDOTnet wrote in message ... I've been using tap water for a decade and never had bad results. -- Don You will likely get better results if you don't. Is your tap water chlorinated? "George" wrote in message .. . "david williams" wrote in message ... HI, My filter seems to soon fill with a browny green sludge. Should I clean it or will cleaning it destroy the bacteria i need? Take a bucket and fill it with some of the pond water. Rinse it out with some of this water. Don't use tap water. |
#6
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![]() "Don" dbitzerATcomcastDOTnet wrote in message ... Yes, it is. Large colonies of bacteria reappear within days. -- Don I'm just saying that it is not recommended. Do whatever works for you. "George" wrote in message .. . "Don" dbitzerATcomcastDOTnet wrote in message ... I've been using tap water for a decade and never had bad results. -- Don You will likely get better results if you don't. Is your tap water chlorinated? "George" wrote in message .. . "david williams" wrote in message ... HI, My filter seems to soon fill with a browny green sludge. Should I clean it or will cleaning it destroy the bacteria i need? Take a bucket and fill it with some of the pond water. Rinse it out with some of this water. Don't use tap water. |
#7
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"George" wrote in message
.. . "david williams" wrote in message ... HI, My filter seems to soon fill with a browny green sludge. Should I clean it or will cleaning it destroy the bacteria i need? Take a bucket and fill it with some of the pond water. Rinse it out with some of this water. Don't use tap water. The brown-green sludge is most likely a combination of the dead bacteria, algae, and sediment that settled onto the filter media. It can be safely washed off. As for not using tap water. I wouldn't worry about it. The bacteria are growing everywhere in your pond. Within a few hours of replacing the filter media, the bacteria colonies will begin to establish themselves on the filter media. The few million that die from chlorinated water exposure may cause a spike in ammonia/nitrate levels for a day, until the bacteria can fully establish themselves. Hardly worth worrying about, or the extra effort of using pond water to clean. When I clean my bio filter, I use a garden hose and spray the muck off the filter. I usually try to save as much of the mucky water as I can, to water the roses. The rest just gets dumped onto the lawn. Snooze |
#8
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I seem to have the same problem, David. I used a bucked of pond water to
rinse out the filter matting in my BioFalls, then poured the gunky (it's a technical term) water on my roses. They didn't seem to complain. My problem is now that the weather is getting hot and I'm getting more sun on my pond, the pebbles and rocks seem to be growing the stuff! They look like they're growing plants of their own! The water is clear enough to see the fishs coulors clearly at the bottom of a 4 foot pond.. There's a bit of this sludge floating around the lily pads and inside the water iris stalks, but not free on the surface. My Water Hyacenths have a floating root system you wouldn't believe! Since they're multiplying quite well, and the WHs are firm, I guess they're doing their job! I guess I need to wander down and try some of that new MicrobeLift-SA.... -- ~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~= john burton Bach 50B3 Bass Trombone, Charleston NeoPhonic Orchestra South Charleston, West Virginia "david williams" wrote in message ... HI, My filter seems to soon fill with a browny green sludge. Should I clean it or will cleaning it destroy the bacteria i need? |
#9
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![]() "John Burton" wrote in message ... I seem to have the same problem, David. I used a bucked of pond water to rinse out the filter matting in my BioFalls, then poured the gunky (it's a technical term) water on my roses. They didn't seem to complain. My problem is now that the weather is getting hot and I'm getting more sun on my pond, the pebbles and rocks seem to be growing the stuff! They look like they're growing plants of their own! The water is clear enough to see the fishs coulors clearly at the bottom of a 4 foot pond.. There's a bit of this sludge floating around the lily pads and inside the water iris stalks, but not free on the surface. My Water Hyacenths have a floating root system you wouldn't believe! Since they're multiplying quite well, and the WHs are firm, I guess they're doing their job! I guess I need to wander down and try some of that new MicrobeLift-SA.... Add aquazyme to your water. It is a powdered form of aerobic bacteria that will colonize the walls, rocks, and the water in your pond, and digest the nutrients, and decaying matter, and the sludge as well. It competes with algae for nutrients, and is a natural algae control. Having said that, you likely won't get rid of all of the algae in your pond unless you nuke it with algaecide or spend a lot of money on a UV filter. By why bother with that? A little algae is a good thing, as long as you control the growth. |
#10
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George wrote:
"John Burton" wrote in message ... I seem to have the same problem, David. I used a bucked of pond water to rinse out the filter matting in my BioFalls, then poured the gunky (it's a technical term) water on my roses. They didn't seem to complain. My problem is now that the weather is getting hot and I'm getting more sun on my pond, the pebbles and rocks seem to be growing the stuff! They look like they're growing plants of their own! The water is clear enough to see the fishs coulors clearly at the bottom of a 4 foot pond.. There's a bit of this sludge floating around the lily pads and inside the water iris stalks, but not free on the surface. My Water Hyacenths have a floating root system you wouldn't believe! Since they're multiplying quite well, and the WHs are firm, I guess they're doing their job! I guess I need to wander down and try some of that new MicrobeLift-SA.... Add aquazyme to your water. It is a powdered form of aerobic bacteria that will colonize the walls, rocks, and the water in your pond, and digest the nutrients, and decaying matter, and the sludge as well. It competes with algae for nutrients, and is a natural algae control. Having said that, you likely won't get rid of all of the algae in your pond unless you nuke it with algaecide or spend a lot of money on a UV filter. By why bother with that? A little algae is a good thing, as long as you control the growth. I have some MicrobeLift PL here, would that do the same thing?? |
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