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Wintering my small pond(first year)
Hi, I live in Ontario, Canada and it can get cold here in the winter, -20.
I have a small pond around 200 gal, 24 inches deep. I have some goldfish and plants (hardy lily, pickeral rush, hyacinth, water iris). At what temperature should I begin to bring the fish in. As for the plants, which will survive outdoors and which should I bring indoors. As for the pond itself, how would I prepare it? Thanks. |
#2
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Wintering my small pond(first year)
"Scrapster1" wrote in message .. . Hi, I live in Ontario, Canada and it can get cold here in the winter, -20. I have a small pond around 200 gal, 24 inches deep. I have some goldfish and plants (hardy lily, pickeral rush, hyacinth, water iris). At what temperature should I begin to bring the fish in. As for the plants, which will survive outdoors and which should I bring indoors. As for the pond itself, how would I prepare it? Thanks. If you are going to bring the fish in for the winter then make sure you do it before the water temp falls below about 55 - that's when they start to "shut down" & it would be more stressful to move them after that. Dunno about the plants I. |
#3
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Wintering my small pond(first year)
"Scrapster1" wrote in message .. . Hi, I live in Ontario, Canada and it can get cold here in the winter, -20. I have a small pond around 200 gal, 24 inches deep. I have some goldfish and plants (hardy lily, pickeral rush, hyacinth, water iris). At what temperature should I begin to bring the fish in. As for the plants, which will survive outdoors and which should I bring indoors. As for the pond itself, how would I prepare it? Thanks. |
#4
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Wintering my small pond(first year)
I live in Whitby. Approx 200 gal pond and about 28 in. deep except for plant
shelves. This will be my second winter. I set the plants (pickeral rush, hyacinth) on the bottom. Left my two Koi in the pond. Set a pot on the bottom on its side for additional shelter for them. I used an air tube with open end set about 8 in. below the surface as a bubbler. It bubbled all winter. Even when ice covered it bubbled up and out the edge of the pond. The fish and plants all survived fine. Last winter was unusually cold and a good test I think so I plan to do same this year. Don "Scrapster1" wrote in message .. . Hi, I live in Ontario, Canada and it can get cold here in the winter, -20. I have a small pond around 200 gal, 24 inches deep. I have some goldfish and plants (hardy lily, pickeral rush, hyacinth, water iris). At what temperature should I begin to bring the fish in. As for the plants, which will survive outdoors and which should I bring indoors. As for the pond itself, how would I prepare it? Thanks. |
#5
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Wintering my small pond(first year)
Curious.. why is that? I would think that if they were "shut down" that it
would be akin to being on tranqs... that is less reactive and less stressed. DKat "Iain Miller" wrote in message ... If you are going to bring the fish in for the winter then make sure you do it before the water temp falls below about 55 - that's when they start to "shut down" & it would be more stressful to move them after that. Dunno about the plants I. |
#6
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Wintering my small pond(first year)
Your Hyacinth survived? I thought they were tropicals?
I'm out in Brampton, 750 gallons give or take, depth only 24". I dropped my pickerel, hardy lilies, and a few others to the bottom of the pond for the winter, all survived fine. The Cardinal plants were buried in the garden bed and mulched, they never came back. All my hyacinth get mulched as I thought they don't survive our winters. I used one of the 100 watt de-icers, did the job last year. "Don Falconer" wrote in message ble.rogers.com... I live in Whitby. Approx 200 gal pond and about 28 in. deep except for plant shelves. This will be my second winter. I set the plants (pickeral rush, hyacinth) on the bottom. Left my two Koi in the pond. Set a pot on the bottom on its side for additional shelter for them. I used an air tube with open end set about 8 in. below the surface as a bubbler. It bubbled all winter. Even when ice covered it bubbled up and out the edge of the pond. The fish and plants all survived fine. Last winter was unusually cold and a good test I think so I plan to do same this year. Don "Scrapster1" wrote in message .. . Hi, I live in Ontario, Canada and it can get cold here in the winter, -20. I have a small pond around 200 gal, 24 inches deep. I have some goldfish and plants (hardy lily, pickeral rush, hyacinth, water iris). At what temperature should I begin to bring the fish in. As for the plants, which will survive outdoors and which should I bring indoors. As for the pond itself, how would I prepare it? Thanks. |
#7
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Wintering my small pond(first year)
Right you are. Hyacinth would not/did not survive.
"Ian" wrote in message news Your Hyacinth survived? I thought they were tropicals? I'm out in Brampton, 750 gallons give or take, depth only 24". I dropped my pickerel, hardy lilies, and a few others to the bottom of the pond for the winter, all survived fine. The Cardinal plants were buried in the garden bed and mulched, they never came back. All my hyacinth get mulched as I thought they don't survive our winters. I used one of the 100 watt de-icers, did the job last year. "Don Falconer" wrote in message ble.rogers.com... I live in Whitby. Approx 200 gal pond and about 28 in. deep except for plant shelves. This will be my second winter. I set the plants (pickeral rush, hyacinth) on the bottom. Left my two Koi in the pond. Set a pot on the bottom on its side for additional shelter for them. I used an air tube with open end set about 8 in. below the surface as a bubbler. It bubbled all winter. Even when ice covered it bubbled up and out the edge of the pond. The fish and plants all survived fine. Last winter was unusually cold and a good test I think so I plan to do same this year. Don "Scrapster1" wrote in message .. . Hi, I live in Ontario, Canada and it can get cold here in the winter, -20. I have a small pond around 200 gal, 24 inches deep. I have some goldfish and plants (hardy lily, pickeral rush, hyacinth, water iris). At what temperature should I begin to bring the fish in. As for the plants, which will survive outdoors and which should I bring indoors. As for the pond itself, how would I prepare it? Thanks. |
#8
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Wintering my small pond(first year)
Right you are. Hyacinth would not/did not survive
I heard of someone in zone 6 who overwintered hyacinth by dropping them to 3 feet so I am gonna try that this year....will give report next spring Jerri http://www.fringeweb.com/Ponds/JerrisPond |
#10
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Wintering my small pond(first year)
While we're asking for inputs on wintering, what about this?
Should I turn OFF my waterfall at some point? 3000gal pond with 8 comets and 1 koi. Deepest point is approx 2feet. I'm a zone 6a or 6b (???).... Input? -- ~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~= john burton Bach 50B3 Bass Trombone, Charleston NeoPhonic Orchestra South Charleston, West Virginia |
#11
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Wintering my small pond(first year)
John Burton wrote:
While we're asking for inputs on wintering, what about this? Should I turn OFF my waterfall at some point? 3000gal pond with 8 comets and 1 koi. Deepest point is approx 2feet. I'm a zone 6a or 6b (???).... Input? I suggest you turn off the waterfall. If ice develops the water can be diverted out of the pond and you could loose a substantial amount of water before you'd realize anything had happened. Use a air pump with airstone hung 3-4" below the water surface to maintain an opening in the ice. This will allow any gases to escape. -- Bonnie NJ http://home.earthlink.net/~maebe43/ |
#12
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Wintering my small pond(first year)
Yes. When your pond's temp falls into the 40s it's time to stop the
waterfall. It just cools the water faster and keeps it cool. Whereas with slow circulation or an air stone the ground with keep your pond warmer. Cover it and it will often remain ice free. ~ jan On Mon, 29 Sep 2003 08:41:52 -0400, "John Burton" wrote: While we're asking for inputs on wintering, what about this? Should I turn OFF my waterfall at some point? 3000gal pond with 8 comets and 1 koi. Deepest point is approx 2feet. I'm a zone 6a or 6b (???).... Input? See my ponds thru the seasons and/or my filter design: http://users.owt.com/jjspond/ ~Keep 'em Defrosted~ Tri-Cities, WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
#13
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Wintering my small pond(first year)
for what it might be worth:
I'm in billerica MA, about 25 miles from NH border...always been fine for leaving my koi outside with a small waterfall return from the shallow end, along with an airstone.... never brought my koi inside (6 years).... this last winter soooooo bad, for sooo long that everything froze, right to the bottom (24 inches) except in one small 36 inch pocket, but this was way too small for 6 12 inch koi and no upper outlet for gas exchange. I bought a pond heater.... and thawed my way thru with buckets of hot water trickled onto the ice.. placed the pond heater in, and it kept an open hole and only cost about $25 a month during temps of 10-20 deg farenheight every koi made it... very pleased... much happier leaving the koi outside if possible...yeah, they grow more slowly, but the joy of seeing them moving for the first time out there during the first thaw is better than the first flowers coming up... T. Scrapster1 wrote: Hi, I live in Ontario, Canada and it can get cold here in the winter, -20. I have a small pond around 200 gal, 24 inches deep. I have some goldfish and plants (hardy lily, pickeral rush, hyacinth, water iris). At what temperature should I begin to bring the fish in. As for the plants, which will survive outdoors and which should I bring indoors. As for the pond itself, how would I prepare it? Thanks. |
#14
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Wintering my small pond(first year)
Sorry I never caught your question sooner - I am in SW Ont (35 mi from
Windsor/ Detroit) - 24" deep is ok in my area for leaving fish in pond - mine is 17" in shallow end and 26" in deep end, although a bit larger ~ 1000 US gals - my water iris sits on a shallow shelf - 6" of water and freezes solid every year - no problem, always comes back (10 yrs) my hardy lilies stay in the shallow end and don't freeze - I never get more than 6" - 7" of ice - the water hyancinths (floating type - is there any other?) I have always disposed of - never heard you could leave them in the pond as is mentioned farther down in this thread, but worth a try - don't know anything about pickerel rush If you leave your fish outdoors, be sure to run an airstone, or heater (I prefer the airstone as it is much easier on hydro) Gale :~) "Scrapster1" wrote in message .. . Hi, I live in Ontario, Canada and it can get cold here in the winter, -20. I have a small pond around 200 gal, 24 inches deep. I have some goldfish and plants (hardy lily, pickeral rush, hyacinth, water iris). At what temperature should I begin to bring the fish in. As for the plants, which will survive outdoors and which should I bring indoors. As for the pond itself, how would I prepare it? Thanks. |
#15
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Wintering my small pond(first year)
Can you talk about heater / airstone alternatives? I live in New England,
have a 4 foot deep pond and have always battled ice. I'm tempted to get one or more of the floating heaters but would like to benefit from the group's experience. Thanks. Brian Tarbox "Gale Pearce" wrote in message ... Sorry I never caught your question sooner - I am in SW Ont (35 mi from Windsor/ Detroit) - 24" deep is ok in my area for leaving fish in pond - mine is 17" in shallow end and 26" in deep end, although a bit larger ~ 1000 US gals - my water iris sits on a shallow shelf - 6" of water and freezes solid every year - no problem, always comes back (10 yrs) my hardy lilies stay in the shallow end and don't freeze - I never get more than 6" - 7" of ice - the water hyancinths (floating type - is there any other?) I have always disposed of - never heard you could leave them in the pond as is mentioned farther down in this thread, but worth a try - don't know anything about pickerel rush If you leave your fish outdoors, be sure to run an airstone, or heater (I prefer the airstone as it is much easier on hydro) Gale :~) "Scrapster1" wrote in message .. . Hi, I live in Ontario, Canada and it can get cold here in the winter, -20. I have a small pond around 200 gal, 24 inches deep. I have some goldfish and plants (hardy lily, pickeral rush, hyacinth, water iris). At what temperature should I begin to bring the fish in. As for the plants, which will survive outdoors and which should I bring indoors. As for the pond itself, how would I prepare it? Thanks. |
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