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#1
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Fish friendly dyes for ponds
I need a source for buying water dyes.
Stephen11962 |
#2
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Fish friendly dyes for ponds
On Sat, 18 Mar 2006 21:42:11 -0500, "Stephen11962"
wrote: I need a source for buying water dyes. Stephen11962 http://aquaticeco.master.com/texis/m...ch/mysite.html I did a search on this site for dye, got several hits |
#3
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Fish friendly dyes for ponds
I dye my natural pond every year, with a product called Crystal
Blue....I think last year they relabeled it to another name, but its the same thing. IMHO dye works very well in reducing light penetration and algae growth, but the biggest side effect is it gives the fish a weird color.....no it does not dye them, but ornage or yellow fish etc look totally different when viewed in dyed water...... This year we are going with the Loc Ness Black dye to see how it works...suposed to be better for concealing fish from predators.......just gonna have to wait and see. Aquatic Eco is perhaps the cheapest and best place to purchase the various dyes.... On Sun, 19 Mar 2006 04:33:16 GMT, Charles wrote: On Sat, 18 Mar 2006 21:42:11 -0500, "Stephen11962" wrote: I need a source for buying water dyes. Stephen11962 http://aquaticeco.master.com/texis/m...ch/mysite.html I did a search on this site for dye, got several hits -- \\\|/// ( @ @ ) -----------oOOo(_)oOOo--------------- oooO ---------( )----Oooo---------------- \ ( ( ) \_) ) / (_/ The original frugal ponder ! Koi-ahoi mates.... |
#4
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Fish friendly dyes for ponds
"Stephen11962" wrote:
I need a source for buying water dyes. Google "pond dye" and you will find lots of sources. Longwood Gardens uses black pond dye in their amazonia ponds. They use it for appearance, to help control algae, and to assist with solar heating. I think the product they use is: http://www.marylandaquatic.com/retai...m?SKU2=4PONDDY -- Pardon my spam deterrent; send email to 18,000 gallon (17'x 47'x 2-4') lily pond garden in Zone 6 Cheers, Steve Henning in Reading, PA USA |
#5
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Fish friendly dyes for ponds
Hey guys, I'm working on a project to solve an phytoplankton problem in
a fairly sizable pond (10,000+ gallons). It has no fish, only birds in it. The pond currently has 4 sandfilters on it and no UV sterlization though that is an option. It has virtually no surface coverage and there has been attempts to use plants before, but that has resulted in them being torn to shreds by ducks. Water flow and overturn are good as well and there is plenty of surface tension to keep the water aerated. I came across this product that is an Aquarium Pharmaceuticals pond dye that is supposed to dye the water blue-green and suppress algal growth. I still have to find out if it is safe for the animals obviously, but was just wandering if anyone had tried it and whether or not it actually worked. The other things that I may try to use are phosphate absorbers (though I'm not sure if they work as well in freshwater as they do in salt, I've really only used them in sal****er), barley extract (the barley straw is just to messy), and though I know it's probably not feasible, sometype of filtration that can skim the phytoplankton out like a diatom filter. Does anyone even know if they make diatom filters for a volume this large? I know it would have to be huge, use a vast amount of diatomaceous earth, problem take forever to filter and get clogged, extremely easy , but would clear the heck out of the water. I'm just curious about that one and whether or not it would be possible to build such a thing. If ya'll know of any plants that ducks won't tear the crap out of I would welcome those suggestions as well. Thanks for any help Ethan Barr |
#6
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Fish friendly dyes for ponds
wrote in message oups.com... If ya'll know of any plants that ducks won't tear the crap out of I would welcome those suggestions as well. ====================== You can call your Agricultural Extension Agent and ask what they recommend for your area. The occasional ducks that visited my ponds before I netted the ponds didn't trash anything. Some of the sturdiest plants are the cattails, water iris and pickerel plant. Ducks will go around them. -- Koi-Lo.... frugal ponding since 1995... Aquariums since 1952 My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://tinyurl.com/9do58 ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
#7
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Fish friendly dyes for ponds
wowow... never thought of that. to help heat the water for those of us in the frozen
tundra of zone 5. Ingrid Stephen Henning wrote: Google "pond dye" and you will find lots of sources. ...............assist with solar heating. I think the product they use is: http://www.marylandaquatic.com/retai...m?SKU2=4PONDDY ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List at http://weloveteaching.com/puregold/ sign up: http://groups.google.com/groups/dir?...s=Group+lookup www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I receive no compensation for running the Puregold list or Puregold website. I do not run nor receive any money from the ads at the old Puregold site. |
#8
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Fish friendly dyes for ponds
Stephen11962 wrote:
I need a source for buying water dyes. Stephen11962 Someone on this NG recommended I use food dye and it works great. I don't have a big pond so a small bottle of BLUE food dye does the trick and it is probably 5 times cheaper than the "official" pond dye. |
#9
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Fish friendly dyes for ponds
wowow... never thought of that. to help heat the water for those of us in the frozen
tundra of zone 5. Ingrid Stephen Henning wrote: Google "pond dye" and you will find lots of sources. ..............assist with solar heating. I would think with a black liner, one wouldn't need much dye. At least around here (So Central WA) some people have black bottoms on their swimming pools, just to warm them up early. Only problem, they can get too warm when we hit a streak of 100 degree days. ~ jan ~ jan/WA Zone 7a |
#10
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Fish friendly dyes for ponds
As long as your keeping ducks your always gonna have a never ending
problem with various algae. I have a natural ponf of 1.65 million gal, and the impact on that pond was noticeable from just 6 mallards...I fought algae bloom after algae bloom......... One or two things that does help is to reduce the DOC, and burn up the nutreints. Get some potassium permanganate and does the pond to oxidize all the junk in it. I seem to belive that adding dye in the hopes of eliminating an algae problem is wishfull thinking, as until you get ahold of the soource of the high nutrients, its not gonna go away. You have a concentrated nutrient source, and as other have noted dyed water will become a bit warmer than undyed water will, it could just lead to a bigger outbreak of more algae. I know, I know, been there done that, folks are gonna sayaa get rid of the ducks if you want clean water and for the most part it is true, there are ways around it. Dosing a few times a year with potassium permanganate, using Baraclear P80, which effectively locks up phosphates which is a major contributor to algae blooms. You will finds trying to keep water clean and clear with ducks or other fowl is going to be more costly and labor intensive than doing the same fish........but it can be done. The pond dyes are all safe for any aquatic inhabitants. On 19 Mar 2006 07:59:33 -0800, " wrote: Hey guys, I'm working on a project to solve an phytoplankton problem in a fairly sizable pond (10,000+ gallons). It has no fish, only birds in it. The pond currently has 4 sandfilters on it and no UV sterlization though that is an option. It has virtually no surface coverage and there has been attempts to use plants before, but that has resulted in them being torn to shreds by ducks. Water flow and overturn are good as well and there is plenty of surface tension to keep the water aerated. I came across this product that is an Aquarium Pharmaceuticals pond dye that is supposed to dye the water blue-green and suppress algal growth. I still have to find out if it is safe for the animals obviously, but was just wandering if anyone had tried it and whether or not it actually worked. The other things that I may try to use are phosphate absorbers (though I'm not sure if they work as well in freshwater as they do in salt, I've really only used them in sal****er), barley extract (the barley straw is just to messy), and though I know it's probably not feasible, sometype of filtration that can skim the phytoplankton out like a diatom filter. Does anyone even know if they make diatom filters for a volume this large? I know it would have to be huge, use a vast amount of diatomaceous earth, problem take forever to filter and get clogged, extremely easy , but would clear the heck out of the water. I'm just curious about that one and whether or not it would be possible to build such a thing. If ya'll know of any plants that ducks won't tear the crap out of I would welcome those suggestions as well. Thanks for any help Ethan Barr -- \\\|/// ( @ @ ) -----------oOOo(_)oOOo--------------- oooO ---------( )----Oooo---------------- \ ( ( ) \_) ) / (_/ The original frugal ponder ! Koi-ahoi mates.... |
#11
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Fish friendly dyes for ponds
Thanks for the advice. Yes the ducks are not going anywhere. We like
em too much. But I'll take your advice on reducing the organics. ethan |
#12
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Quote:
Blue dye for the deeper ponds with fish and Black for the small ones without! The Black one was featured on the BBC programme, A Year at Kew a year or so back |
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