Thread: Duckweed
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Old 24-06-2007, 11:44 AM posted to rec.ponds.moderated
~ jan[_3_] ~ jan[_3_] is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Apr 2007
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Default Duckweed

On Sat, 23 Jun 2007 15:51:32 CST, Galen Hekhuis
wrote:

I have three ponds also. The front one and the back one are covered
in duckweed, but the middle pond (near the house) doesn't have a bit.
I know it has been "inoculated," I've seen ducks, cormorants, ibises,
egrets, and others visit the pond. I've even seen duckweed floating
in the pond, but I guess it just dies out because the pond stays free
of it.

I've been a cave explorer for some 40+ years and now live in some of
the best cave diving country in the world (northern Florida). Having
spent so much time underground and having friends that actually swim
around in the underground water I am extremely anal about putting any
kind of chemical where it can get in the ground or groundwater.
Herbicides are right out for me. I have no fish in the pond, either.
I haven't the foggiest why I don't have any duckweed there.

I've tried to search for solutions but haven't found hardly anything
promising. Methods of biological control (mainly fish that eat
duckweed) have mixed reviews, the majority seem to think it a pretty
iffy proposition, if not an outright poor method of control.
Mechanical methods (skimming and the like) seem to provide only very
temporary fixes. That leaves chemical methods (herbicides), and aside
from my reluctance to go that route it isn't a cheap way to go,
either. Besides, just about anything that kills duckweed kills a lot
of other stuff too, there doesn't seem to be anything like a duckweed
specific herbicide.


Maybe it is just my fish. But my little inside pond was covered with it
after over wintering the tropicals. I was thinking what a job it was going
to be to net it out so I could clean the muck on the pond. Then I purchased
4 small wakins. The only duckweed in there now is what washed up on two
fake lilies where the fish can't get to it. I was able to vac the bottom
out a few days ago. :-)

My Q-tank is another place it disappears with relish. Probably because
there isn't much else to eat, other than the food I throw in. IMHO, if the
fish aren't fed, they'll eat the duckweed. But in a natural pond, there is
a whole lot of other things to eat.... YMMV. ~ jan
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Zone 7a, SE Washington State
Ponds: www.jjspond.us