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#1
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![]() "Jim" wrote in message link.net... We have one pond that is thriving. When we bought two ducks, I built a second pond so the ducks wouldn't destroy the first pond. I don't have any fish or plants in the duck pond - the ducks eat everything in sight. The problem I have is the water is incredibly hard to keep clean. It isn't a very large pond - about 300 gallons - and I have it filtered. Unfortunately the filter is mucked up and clogged within 2 days of cleaning. I have tried pond additives to kill the algae with little success. The water is bright, fluorescent green and generally gross. I realize the ducks are going to soil the water, but are there any suggestions on how to aggressively clean the water without harming the ducks? I don't intend to grow fish or plants in it, but the ducks swim and drink from the pond. 1. More filtration or 2. Addition of filtering plants like water hyacinth or water lettuce. The algae is thriving because of the high amount of nutrients. Killing the algae, just makes more food for the algae. You need a plant to out-compete the algae. BV. |
#2
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The ducks will be sending the amonia and nitrate levels sky high.
No amount of mechanical filtering will help. You need to buy a test kit check the levels and add somthing like the Blagdon pondsafe range to ballance the chemicals. Details of various chemicals avaliable on my website www.arghamvillage.co.uk BenignVanilla wrote in message ... "Jim" wrote in message link.net... We have one pond that is thriving. When we bought two ducks, I built a second pond so the ducks wouldn't destroy the first pond. I don't have any fish or plants in the duck pond - the ducks eat everything in sight. The problem I have is the water is incredibly hard to keep clean. It isn't a very large pond - about 300 gallons - and I have it filtered. Unfortunately the filter is mucked up and clogged within 2 days of cleaning. I have tried pond additives to kill the algae with little success. The water is bright, fluorescent green and generally gross. I realize the ducks are going to soil the water, but are there any suggestions on how to aggressively clean the water without harming the ducks? I don't intend to grow fish or plants in it, but the ducks swim and drink from the pond. 1. More filtration or 2. Addition of filtering plants like water hyacinth or water lettuce. The algae is thriving because of the high amount of nutrients. Killing the algae, just makes more food for the algae. You need a plant to out-compete the algae. BV. |
#3
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![]() "BenignVanilla" wrote in message ... 1. More filtration or 2. Addition of filtering plants like water hyacinth or water lettuce. The algae is thriving because of the high amount of nutrients. Killing the algae, just makes more food for the algae. You need a plant to out-compete the algae. Any other "tricks" other than plopping in water hyacinth or water lettuce. I hear that both are so agressive that they tend to "take over" the top of the falls or where ever they're planted. One suggestion I heard (and would like a bit of feedback) is to put them in a PVC "square". That is, build a ring around the rosie ... Whaddya think? --==jb==-- ~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~= john burton Bach 50B3 Bass Trombone, Charleston NeoPhonic Orchestra South Charleston, West Virginia |
#4
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jb,
I use a hula hoop, and I have made something similar, where I needed one much larger, using poly tubing and a dowel of appropriate size to make it into a loop. Works great, most of the time. Large koi will play with the plants and sometimes bring them out of the loop, but they need to be thinned anyhow, so send the errant ones to the compost pile. -- RichToyBox http://www.geocities.com/richtoybox/pondintro.html "John Burton" wrote in message ... "BenignVanilla" wrote in message ... 1. More filtration or 2. Addition of filtering plants like water hyacinth or water lettuce. The algae is thriving because of the high amount of nutrients. Killing the algae, just makes more food for the algae. You need a plant to out-compete the algae. Any other "tricks" other than plopping in water hyacinth or water lettuce. I hear that both are so agressive that they tend to "take over" the top of the falls or where ever they're planted. One suggestion I heard (and would like a bit of feedback) is to put them in a PVC "square". That is, build a ring around the rosie ... Whaddya think? --==jb==-- ~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~= john burton Bach 50B3 Bass Trombone, Charleston NeoPhonic Orchestra South Charleston, West Virginia |
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