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Old 17-03-2003, 04:20 PM
John
 
Posts: n/a
Default Pond Newbie need urgent help!!!

Thanks for you expert help, you are absolutely right, afer a whole day
rain last Saturday, looks the wood, brick support is going to be fine,
and it did find a place to overflow the excess water.
I will wait 4 another weeks (total 5 weeks) to let the rest
chloramines evaporate before I put Koi inside, I already put 10 gold
fish in , there looks very good (at lease right now)
I will take your advise to put a few (6) small Koi inside first,
but I got one question, when will I know that I need a filter, by
testing the PH level of the water?
Thanks again.
John

"RichToyBox" wrote in message news:dc6ca.78814$S_4.53577@rwcrnsc53...
John,

As for the leveling, what you have done should be satisfactory. I have
raised the edge of a pond using concrete block to get an extra 4 inches of
depth. I would be sure that the high side of the yard, where it contacts
the pond, is at least an inch or more lower than the edge of the pond to
keep runoff from the yard from flowing into the pond. Fertilizer, weed
killer, and other chemicals from the yard can cause serious problems for the
pond. As for the water depth, it can come to the top of the liner. It will
find a place to overflow during rainstorms, and you might want to decide
where that is yourself, and provide a low spot in the liner, with some form
of gutter or dry stream bed to take the overflow.

I personally don't believe any pond, except very large mud ponds should have
koi without a filter. At the size of your pond, the general rule of thumb
would say you could have 55 or 60 koi. They will get very large in a matter
of just a few years. As for the use of plants in the pond, I have plants in
my ponds, with koi. Generally they have not bothered the plants, but I feed
them about 4 times a day. Each feeding is about 1 cup of food per pond.
Each pond has about 20 koi, with most of them over 24 inches in length. By
the above rule, I should be able to handle about 40 in my large pond, but I
don't think they would be able to swim around each other. If you wanted to
start out with just a few small koi, your pond may be able to handle the
ammonia, nitrItes, and other biological filtration functions without a
filter for the first year. This would give you until next year to install a
filter. The veggie filter is simple, just another shallow pond with lots of
plants, and an overflow into the pond.

Your pond water should have been treated with some kind of dechlorinator.
Most areas are now using chloramines and these stay in the water for quite
some time. Both chlorine and chloramine are very toxic to the fish. It you
have already done that, then the fish can start to be added almost
immediately. The bottled bacteria are good for digesting the leaves, and
other solid debris, but are not the bacteria that convert ammonia or
nitrItes. These will establish themselves over a period of time. To know
when they have established themselves, you need to test the water for
ammonia and nitrIte. Both of these are toxic to the fish. The ammonia will
build first, and as the bacterial colony develops, they will convert the
ammonia to nitrIte, and then as the nitrIte builds, the other bacteria will
go to work. The way to get this going without harming the fish is to start
with very low fish loads, and keep feedings down to small quantities until
the pond stabilizes. If the numbers go up, stop feeding until the numbers
come back down. After the numbers come down, then additional fish can be
added or the fish can be fed more.

I will let someone else address gold fish.
--
RichToyBox
http://www.geocities.com/richtoybox/pondintro.html


"John" wrote in message
m...
To all ponders:
I have read pond FAQ 3 times (very very useful info),
and built my first pond 5500-6000 gallons (EPDM liner), I am having
some problems and questions:
1) my pond is not leveled!!!! (i did not notice that
until I fill the 90% of water) , the lowest end is 5 inchs lower than
the higher end, first I put soil underearth the liner edge, but the
soil was too soft, then I put some 2x4 2x6 wood, bricks, that got it
almost leveled, but I am worry about the long term effect on the
liner, because the 4 inches of water is supported by wood and bricks
under the liner, is there a better way to handle this situation or is
this the only way to do it? (I do not want to pump the water out
now,it will take forever! plus I want to see fish swim in the pond
ASAP)
2) how close should the water surface close to the
ground( top liner)? I am leaving it very close now(less than 1/2 inch)
3) Per FAQ, my pond should be fine without filters (in
terms of size) and I already put some plant inside the pond (planning
adding more) , how many Koi and gold fish I keep by without a filter
4) if i wait 2 weeks, can I start adding fish to my
pond without adding bacterial starter ?
5) per FAQ "Koi eat plants of all types, and so it is
not practical to keep plants in the same ponds as koi." is that means
I can not put koi inside this pond if I want put have plants??
I am in Los Angels,CA (zone 11?)
Please advise
Thanks
John