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Rick Samuel 29-04-2009 05:08 PM

Pond enlargement
 
Hello all, haven't been here in a while. Built my pond in 2000, it's about
1000 gal. Everything went well, learned a bunch.

Well, SWMBO wants a bigger one, and I retire in a few months, so I suspect
this is to keep me off the streets. G Gonna be about 2500 gal, not a Koi
pond, just bait store GF, and a bunch of plants. GF get to fair size if the
herons do make it a Mcfish fast food.

My question is about a "Skippy" type filter, what gph feeds this type
filter? Old filters were in the pond. Want external. I read a 100 gal
Rubbermaid tub is good for 3000 gal. But how much to the input side, 50gph,
200gph?

Thanks



Jim and Phyllis 29-04-2009 11:27 PM

Pond enlargement
 
Rick,

Nice to have you back in the group.

Folks will have a lot of good advice for you about size and flow. Let
me be the first to cheer for your improvement.

Then let me be the first to suggest the benefit of an out of pond
veggie filter or even a bog as compared to a regular filter. Lots
less cleaning. Just a slow flow through lots of nutrient grabbing/
mechanical filtering plant roots. If you have a good drain, you can
clean it every year or so by opening the drain and flushing with pond
water.

Phyllis and I have 3,900 gal total, with 1,000 gal in the berm ponds.
Easy to maintain and beautiful...we think.

Our pond and veggie filters are at: http://home.bellsouth.net/personalpages/pwp-jameshurley.

Jim


Rick Samuel 30-04-2009 03:07 PM

Pond enlargement
 

"Jim and Phyllis" wrote in message
...
Rick,

Nice to have you back in the group.

Folks will have a lot of good advice for you about size and flow. Let
me be the first to cheer for your improvement.

Then let me be the first to suggest the benefit of an out of pond
veggie filter or even a bog as compared to a regular filter. Lots
less cleaning. Just a slow flow through lots of nutrient grabbing/
mechanical filtering plant roots. If you have a good drain, you can
clean it every year or so by opening the drain and flushing with pond
water.

Phyllis and I have 3,900 gal total, with 1,000 gal in the berm ponds.
Easy to maintain and beautiful...we think.

Our pond and veggie filters are at:
http://home.bellsouth.net/personalpages/pwp-jameshurley.

Jim



Nice set-up, thanks. That was one of my first thoughts was a bog filter,
to add to our current pond. But when we thought about expanding, kinda
slipped to the wayside. Thanks for bringing it up. Have room for it, Ha!
less to mow.

I'm in the mid-east till Jan. so have time to work this all out. I suspect
it may be a year to get the hunny-do list down to 2-3 pages....

Parrot's Feather almost took over our pond a few years ago. Confined to a
bog would work great. Hyacinth dies out each year, as water lettuce. We
collect it from the San Marcos river....it's illegal to move it in TX, but
as it goes into an enclosed system, no escape.

Can you give a breakdown of your plumbing? No rush, have 8 mo. yet.



Kurt[_2_] 30-04-2009 11:31 PM

Pond enlargement
 
In article
,
Jim and Phyllis wrote:

Rick,

Nice to have you back in the group.

Folks will have a lot of good advice for you about size and flow. Let
me be the first to cheer for your improvement.

Then let me be the first to suggest the benefit of an out of pond
veggie filter or even a bog as compared to a regular filter. Lots
less cleaning. Just a slow flow through lots of nutrient grabbing/
mechanical filtering plant roots. If you have a good drain, you can
clean it every year or so by opening the drain and flushing with pond
water.

Phyllis and I have 3,900 gal total, with 1,000 gal in the berm ponds.
Easy to maintain and beautiful...we think.

Our pond and veggie filters are at:
http://home.bellsouth.net/personalpages/pwp-jameshurley.

Jim


Forgot how nice a setup your pond is. Good work you two!

--
To reply by email, remove the word "space"


[email protected] 03-05-2009 04:35 PM

Pond enlargement
 
I will definitely second the ease and benefit of a veggie filter. Because I only
have a 25' x 25' back yard my 1600 gallon partly above ground koi pond has a veggie
filter that sits on TOP of the pond along two edges.
http://weloveteaching.com/mypond/mypond.htm
I even have a veggie filter sits inside my pond for winter. I do not use "low" water
plants like hyacinths instead use water celery and cyperus (papyrus) that grow
upright and take less space per huge root ball. INgrid

On Wed, 29 Apr 2009 18:27:41 EDT, Jim and Phyllis wrote:
Then let me be the first to suggest the benefit of an out of pond
veggie filter or even a bog as compared to a regular filter. Lots
less cleaning. Just a slow flow through lots of nutrient grabbing/
mechanical filtering plant roots. If you have a good drain, you can
clean it every year or so by opening the drain and flushing with pond
water.
Our pond and veggie filters are at: http://home.bellsouth.net/personalpages/pwp-jameshurley.



~ jan[_3_] 04-05-2009 01:03 AM

Pond enlargement
 
How'd your water cress do?

I put water cress in black mesh baskets that have pipe insulation noodles
cut to size and ziplocked on to the top edge, makes the basket float at the
surface. Nothing else within basket, creates a nice green island. And they
survived nicely all winter! Granted they reduce in size as winter goes on,
but they're coming back strong now. ~ jan

On Sun, 3 May 2009 11:35:13 EDT, wrote:


I will definitely second the ease and benefit of a veggie filter. Because I only
have a 25' x 25' back yard my 1600 gallon partly above ground koi pond has a veggie
filter that sits on TOP of the pond along two edges.
http://weloveteaching.com/mypond/mypond.htm
I even have a veggie filter sits inside my pond for winter. I do not use "low" water
plants like hyacinths instead use water celery and cyperus (papyrus) that grow
upright and take less space per huge root ball. INgrid

On Wed, 29 Apr 2009 18:27:41 EDT, Jim and Phyllis wrote:
Then let me be the first to suggest the benefit of an out of pond
veggie filter or even a bog as compared to a regular filter. Lots
less cleaning. Just a slow flow through lots of nutrient grabbing/
mechanical filtering plant roots. If you have a good drain, you can
clean it every year or so by opening the drain and flushing with pond
water.
Our pond and veggie filters are at: http://home.bellsouth.net/personalpages/pwp-jameshurley.

------------
Zone 7a, SE Washington State
Ponds: www.jjspond.us


sbryan 04-05-2009 09:19 PM

Pond enlargement
 
My rule of thumb is that the pump should be capable of turning the pond
capacity at least once per hour. More is better. I had a 90 gallon pond
with a 5-gallon homemade "Skippy" fed by a 300 gallon per hour pump that
worked great for years. I now have an 1800 gallon pond with a 2400 gallon
per hour pump operating a Savio waterfall with skimmer and all is well for
two years now.

Bryan
Dallas, TX

"Rick Samuel" wrote in message
...
Hello all, haven't been here in a while. Built my pond in 2000, it's
about 1000 gal. Everything went well, learned a bunch.

Well, SWMBO wants a bigger one, and I retire in a few months, so I suspect
this is to keep me off the streets. G Gonna be about 2500 gal, not a
Koi pond, just bait store GF, and a bunch of plants. GF get to fair size
if the herons do make it a Mcfish fast food.

My question is about a "Skippy" type filter, what gph feeds this type
filter? Old filters were in the pond. Want external. I read a 100 gal
Rubbermaid tub is good for 3000 gal. But how much to the input side,
50gph, 200gph?

Thanks



Rick Samuel 05-05-2009 05:32 PM

Pond enlargement
 

"sbryan" wrote in message
...
My rule of thumb is that the pump should be capable of turning the pond
capacity at least once per hour. More is better. I had a 90 gallon pond
with a 5-gallon homemade "Skippy" fed by a 300 gallon per hour pump that
worked great for years. I now have an 1800 gallon pond with a 2400 gallon
per hour pump operating a Savio waterfall with skimmer and all is well for
two years now.

Bryan
Dallas, TX


Yes, water changes at least once an hour, so I assume ALL the water goes
thru the biofilter, none bypasses and goes straight to the pond from pump.
Thinking of two 100 gal. Rubbermaid stock tubs as the bio. One stepped
down from the first, gravity flow. Seems as tho asking a lot of gravity,
thru 4" PVC connectors. The pump I'm looking at is a Sequence 750 series,
4200 with leaf basket, 2800gph with the head I'll have.



theilliniguy 05-05-2009 05:33 PM

Pond enlargement
 


I sent 2 posts the other day - neither show up?


Jim and Phyllis 05-05-2009 05:33 PM

Pond enlargement
 
Jan,

Have you a pic of your cress island?

Jim


[email protected] 06-05-2009 02:20 AM

Pond enlargement
 
water cress died before rooting. I think I will stick to water celery which thrives
for me. Ingrid

On Sun, 3 May 2009 20:03:57 EDT, ~ jan wrote:
How'd your water cress do?



Jim and Phyllis 06-05-2009 02:06 PM

Pond enlargement
 
Your flow through rate may be too fast for settlement in a veggie
filter. How long will it take it to pass throught your filter?

Jim


Galen Hekhuis 06-05-2009 06:24 PM

Pond enlargement
 
On Tue, 5 May 2009 12:33:08 EDT, theilliniguy
wrote:



I sent 2 posts the other day - neither show up?


Do you have any other information? The more information we have, the
more likely it is that our looking into it might do some good.


~ jan[_3_] 09-05-2009 09:44 PM

Pond enlargement
 
Not yet, but will eventually. ~ jan

On Tue, 5 May 2009 12:33:17 EDT, Jim and Phyllis
wrote:

Jan,

Have you a pic of your cress island?

Jim

------------
Zone 7a, SE Washington State
Ponds: www.jjspond.us


~ jan[_3_] 09-05-2009 09:53 PM

Pond enlargement
 
On Tue, 5 May 2009 12:32:27 EDT, "Rick Samuel"
wrote:

Yes, water changes at least once an hour, so I assume ALL the water goes
thru the biofilter, none bypasses and goes straight to the pond from pump.
Thinking of two 100 gal. Rubbermaid stock tubs as the bio. One stepped
down from the first, gravity flow. Seems as tho asking a lot of gravity,
thru 4" PVC connectors. The pump I'm looking at is a Sequence 750 series,
4200 with leaf basket, 2800gph with the head I'll have.

Niagara seems to manage well on gravity. ;-) Question is, are the bulkheads
big enough to allow the gph you want to pass thru fast enough? ~ jan
------------
Zone 7a, SE Washington State
Ponds: www.jjspond.us



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