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#31
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pondscaping a dream pond
State of the leak.
Well, I found those suckers! The patch material sent to me by BTL did not do such a great job at sealing up. In spite of making sure the liner was clean and dry, after applying the patch material and putting the liner in the pond, filling it with water, the water found a way under the patches and was slowly seeping out. I repaired the leaks with some Beckett's liner tape (I have used it before with excellent results.) I hope this solves the problem. I reapplied the patch material supplied by BTL, then edged it with a 1 1/2 inch strip of Beckett Liner tape and then covered that with a cut to fit piece of EPDM liner. Think that will hold it? I know I sure hope so! :-))) W. Dale Time to refill the new pond; all 17' X 21' X 4.5'. |
#32
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pondscaping a dream pond
W Dale wrote:
Humidity today is 11%. How's it feel to be so humid? If we get above 10% here in Phoenix during May-Aug we feel sticky. Aug-Sept we get the "Monsoon" season and can reach as high as 25%-35%. Chip |
#33
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pondscaping a dream pond
the fact that you have such a high humidity in a desert is to me a crime
against the environment but i'm not going to get on my soap box and rant against the insanity of phoenix requiring people to grow lawns... we have had 100% humidity and temperatures above 90F on long island - further south that is much more common and with higher temperatures. I have tried to convince my spouse that 120 in southern california is far cooler than what we get here and that it is all about the humidity. he won't buy it. in the desert when you sweat it cools you off - out here it just increases your misery. i feel so sorry for my fish when the water gets too warm. i envy you your 10%. donna "Chip" wrote in message ... W Dale wrote: Humidity today is 11%. How's it feel to be so humid? If we get above 10% here in Phoenix during May-Aug we feel sticky. Aug-Sept we get the "Monsoon" season and can reach as high as 25%-35%. Chip |
#34
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pondscaping a dream pond
This is probably a poor time to mention this but I will anyway. Here
in northern Florida we have yet to break into triple digits. It's gotten to 97-98, but it hasn't hit (or gone over) 100. It didn't last year or the year before that either. I think maybe it did 3 years ago or so, but I may have just dreamed that. The humidity is higher than a lot of places, but this isn't the furnace some people imagine, especially given our latitude. I think it gets hotter and more miserable in places like New York (city), Chicago or Washington, DC. By the way, we did get almost 1.5 inches of rain yesterday, and now the big pond by the house (which had almost dried up) is back to being a giant mud puddle. Maybe if we get 20 or 30 more inches it will fill up. Galen Hekhuis |
#35
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pondscaping a dream pond
On Thu, 26 Jun 2008 15:43:08 EDT, "DKat" wrote:
we have had 100% humidity and temperatures above 90F on long island We call that rain. ;-) Prior to agriculture I'm sure our humidity was similar to Phoenix way back when. Now we're use to anything under 20%. We don't get sticky till it hits 30%. ;-) Sounds like hubby needs to take a vacation in a desert. Low humidity one can work out in the shade in the high 80's to 90F w/o noticing sweat (unless you're hot flash prone, when only a stiff breeze helps). And then at higher temps one can turn on overhead misters and actually feel cold when a breeze comes up. ;-) ~ jan ------------ Zone 7a, SE Washington State Ponds: www.jjspond.us |
#36
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pondscaping a dream pond
DKat wrote:
the fact that you have such a high humidity in a desert is to me a crime against the environment but i'm not going to get on my soap box and rant against the insanity of phoenix requiring people to grow lawns... I'm confused??! The high 25-35% is due to the jet stream patterns bringing Gulf of Mexico or Gulf of Cortez moisture during the monsoon season. Nothing to do with lawns. Required to have lawns, never heard of it in the 15 yrs I've lived here??? They are doing their best to have them torn out and replaced with zeriscaping with low moisture planting. Now we do have a lot of lawn (people from back East seem to insist on it) and golf courses, but that has little to do with the humidity. Majority of yards are like mine, gravel-80%, small lawn for dog-10%, pool-10%. I'm converting most of my lawn to patio and my pool to pond and veggie filter. Chip |
#37
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pondscaping a dream pond
Triple digits here this weekend too.
DH is spending his second weekend camping with the scouts down on a river delta. Last weekend we had a fierce thunderstorm move in on them, this weekend they get the triple digits. k :-) |
#38
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pondscaping a dream pond
more rain as I look out the window. the mosquitoes are hellatious and I dont think
we have seen more than a couple in nearly 10 years. we had about 10" when the floods were hitting the midwest. And yesterday was our first 85+ day all year. we are 6 blocks from the big puddle (L. Michigan) and it is humid nearly all the time. Happily, I like humidity, my skin likes humidity especially after the freeze dry of winter. sigh. school starts next week. time to gear up. Ingrid |
#39
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pondscaping a dream pond
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#40
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pondscaping a dream pond
just shy of 2 hours 3 times per week. in the morning done by 11:30. got a TA to
teach the lab. 8 of them. They are all women and all seniors for some reason. I do like teaching to small groups, quite different than the 100-150 I have in fall and spring. Ingrid On Sun, 29 Jun 2008 15:52:03 EDT, ~ jan wrote: On Fri, 27 Jun 2008 16:21:50 EDT, wrote: winter. sigh. school starts next week. time to gear up. Ingrid Now that's a crime.... Teaching summer school, I hope the hours are shorter. ~ jan ------------ Zone 7a, SE Washington State Ponds: www.jjspond.us |
#41
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pondscaping a dream pond
On Jun 26, 11:53 am, Chip wrote:
W Dale wrote: Humidity today is 11%. How's it feel to be so humid? If we get above 10% here in Phoenix during May-Aug we feel sticky. Aug-Sept we get the "Monsoon" season and can reach as high as 25%-35%. Chip LOL! It feels GREAT! You see, I was born and reared in Laurel, MS. And while I have acclimated to the Rockies, I do miss the moisture of the deep south. I think I would just dry up and blow away there in Phoenix! |
#42
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pondscaping a dream pond
On Jul 1, 7:09 am, wrote:
just shy of 2 hours 3 times per week. in the morning done by 11:30. got a TA to teach the lab. 8 of them. They are all women and all seniors for some reason. I do like teaching to small groups, quite different than the 100-150 I have in fall and spring. Ingrid On Sun, 29 Jun 2008 15:52:03 EDT, ~ jan wrote: On Fri, 27 Jun 2008 16:21:50 EDT, wrote: winter. sigh. school starts next week. time to gear up. Ingrid Now that's a crime.... Teaching summer school, I hope the hours are shorter. ~ jan ------------ Zone 7a, SE Washington State Ponds:www.jjspond.us Well, it sounds like your 'work load' will be light! What subject will you be teaching? I had to cancel my summer band program this year because I did not receive enough pre-registrations to cover the class. Of course, there were some registrations coming in after the deadline but that does not do accounting any good. W. Dale |
#43
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pondscaping a dream pond
Leaky pond update:
Well, the leaks have been patched and the pond has been refilled. The two 55 gallon barrel settling tanks have been sealed (finally!) and the pond level seems stable. Veggie filter is running (fish are in it and seem to be spawning!) and the bog pond is going. Lost a 13 inch koi last night / early this morning. It jumped out of the veggie filter and suffocated. Beautiful koi too. Very sad. So today, even though they are VERY frisky, they are going back into the pond. I don't want to lose anymore like that. I think in 24 months, I will take out the 3" pipe and replace it with 4" pipe to better feed the Sequence 5800 pump I have going. And I think it will be worth the effort to plumb each bottom drain into the settling tanks separately. That should help the flow keep up with pump. As I have it right now, the tops of the barrels are closed in effect creating a priming pot for the pump. So far, so good. :-) W. Dale |
#44
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pondscaping a dream pond
On Tue, 1 Jul 2008 15:24:34 EDT, LeahMarie
wrote: On Jun 26, 11:53 am, Chip wrote: W Dale wrote: Humidity today is 11%. How's it feel to be so humid? If we get above 10% here in Phoenix during May-Aug we feel sticky. Aug-Sept we get the "Monsoon" season and can reach as high as 25%-35%. Chip LOL! It feels GREAT! You see, I was born and reared in Laurel, MS. And while I have acclimated to the Rockies, I do miss the moisture of the deep south. I think I would just dry up and blow away there in Phoenix! I used to live right down the road in Hattiesburg, MS. I was born in Biloxi. Southern Mississippi got too cold for me, so I moved to Florida. :^) Anyway, we closed out the month here with a bit over an inch of rain bringing us to 5.96 inches for June. That's close enough to 6 inches for me. It's a lot more than we got last year and if we get another 20-30 inches we just might bust this drought. I can now look at the big pond by the house and actually see water in it! It's a long way from being full, but at least it isn't just mud anymore. |
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