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CanadianCowboyİ 30-03-2006 08:59 PM

Pond snails
 
I am hearing good things about having snails in your pond.
What do you experts think ?
I am afraid that these things multiply like crazy and don't want them
getting into my vegetable garden or plants lining the pond.

[email protected] 31-03-2006 12:03 AM

Pond snails
 
they eat your plants, the die and seriously foul the water.
worst, snails are the intermediate host for quite a few fish diseases.
Ingrid

CanadianCowboyİ wrote:

I am hearing good things about having snails in your pond.
What do you experts think ?
I am afraid that these things multiply like crazy and don't want them
getting into my vegetable garden or plants lining the pond.




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Zone 5 next to Lake Michigan

CanadianCowboyİ 31-03-2006 12:43 AM

Pond snails
 
wrote:
they eat your plants, the die and seriously foul the water.
worst, snails are the intermediate host for quite a few fish diseases.
Ingrid

CanadianCowboyİ wrote:

I am hearing good things about having snails in your pond.
What do you experts think ?
I am afraid that these things multiply like crazy and don't want them
getting into my vegetable garden or plants lining the pond.




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Zone 5 next to Lake Michigan

Well you answered my question.

Thanks !!!

Altum 31-03-2006 01:37 AM

Pond snails
 
wrote:
they eat your plants, the die and seriously foul the water.
worst, snails are the intermediate host for quite a few fish diseases.
Ingrid


Gee, my ramshorn snails only eat algae and dead plant leaves, leaving
the plants untouched. My fish are healthy, the water is not foul, and I
like to watch the snails cruise the pond.

How did you kill enough snails at once to foul the water? Ewww...

--
Put the word aquaria in the subject to reply.
Did you read the FAQ?
http://faq.thekrib.com

CanadianCowboyİ 31-03-2006 01:56 AM

Pond snails
 
Altum wrote:
wrote:
they eat your plants, the die and seriously foul the water. worst,
snails are the intermediate host for quite a few fish diseases.
Ingrid


Gee, my ramshorn snails only eat algae and dead plant leaves, leaving
the plants untouched. My fish are healthy, the water is not foul, and I
like to watch the snails cruise the pond.

How did you kill enough snails at once to foul the water? Ewww...


Did you buy the ramshorn snails at an aquarium store ?
Are they the GOLD ones ?

Derek Broughton 31-03-2006 02:37 AM

Pond snails
 
CanadianCowboyİ wrote:

I am hearing good things about having snails in your pond.
What do you experts think ?
I am afraid that these things multiply like crazy and don't want them
getting into my vegetable garden or plants lining the pond.


I don't _think_ aquatic snails are likely to get into your terrestrial
plants. They're aquatic :-) And despite Ingrid's cautions, you're not
going to have a pond _without_ snails. I don't think the "die and
seriously foul the water" issue is a problem. Ponds are full of creatures
that die. Mostly they get eaten by something else before they become
problems. I wouldn't deliberately introduce snails - partly because
they're "disease vectors", and partly because purchased snails are likely
to be non-native and they will definitely get loose, but don't worry about
trying to eliminate the ones you _will_ find.
--
derek

Stephen Henning 31-03-2006 05:13 AM

Pond snails
 
wrote:
they eat your plants, the die and seriously foul the water.
worst, snails are the intermediate host for quite a few fish diseases.
Ingrid


I use trap door snails to keep my pond clean. They thrive on algae and
don't touch my plants and dead plant material. My fish love the nice
clean water they leave.
--
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

Gareeeİ 31-03-2006 05:17 AM

Pond snails
 
"Stephen Henning" wrote in message
...
wrote:
they eat your plants, the die and seriously foul the water.
worst, snails are the intermediate host for quite a few fish diseases.
Ingrid


I use trap door snails to keep my pond clean. They thrive on algae and
don't touch my plants and dead plant material. My fish love the nice
clean water they leave.


Can those be purchased at pet stores?

We saw snails in a mountain stream on a hike today, and I was quite temped
to put a bunch in a water bottle, bring them back, and add them to our
pond...

--
Gareeeİ
(Gary Tabar Jr.)



Altum 31-03-2006 06:53 AM

Pond snails
 
CanadianCowboyİ wrote:

Did you buy the ramshorn snails at an aquarium store ?
Are they the GOLD ones ?


Nothing that fancy. I got a bag of duckweed from a friend at the
aquarium society and there were red and brown ramshorns in it. I put
the red ones inside and the brown ones outdoors. They stay quite small
- usually smaller than a dime. Avoid the big, gold Columbian ramshorns.
Those are voracious plant eaters.

I also have a few physid snails - I have no idea where they came from.
They're the little bitty football shaped ones. They have more of a
reputation for multiplying and eating plants, but my plants look fine.

You mentioned collecting from a mountain stream, but I'm not sure I'd go
that far. Ingrid has a good point that snails can carry diseases,
although all of the snail-borne diseases also require specific
fish-eating birds and specific species of snails. The whole lifecycle
is unlikely to be completed in a small pond, but maybe in a larger one.
Of course, a large pond will get snails anyway.

Sick fish - pelican or heron - infected snail - waterborne parasite.

--
Put the word aquaria in the subject to reply.
Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com

Snooze 31-03-2006 07:41 AM

Pond snails
 

"Altum" wrote in message
et...

Sick fish - pelican or heron - infected snail - waterborne parasite.


I think you missed a step in there.

infected fish - heron - poop in water - infected snail - waterborne
parasite.



Altum 31-03-2006 09:16 AM

Pond snails
 
Snooze wrote:
"Altum" wrote in message
et...
Sick fish - pelican or heron - infected snail - waterborne parasite.


I think you missed a step in there.

infected fish - heron - poop in water - infected snail - waterborne
parasite.


Yeah. Ewww. Another goes something like

infected fish - bird's throat - back in water while eating another
fish - infected snail - waterborne parasite - burrow into fish

Is that a weird lifecycle or what??? I'll stick to plain old sexual
reproduction, thanks. ;-)

--
Put the word aquaria in the subject to reply.
Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com

DavidM 31-03-2006 12:32 PM

Pond snails
 
CanadianCowboyİ wrote:
I am hearing good things about having snails in your pond.
What do you experts think ?
I am afraid that these things multiply like crazy and don't want them
getting into my vegetable garden or plants lining the pond.



Is this the first real pond post in days? I filter out all posts that
_don't_ have the word "pond" in their subject. How many am I missing?

I gave up keeping a killfile for this group long ago, the last couple of
days there have been hundreds of messages that got filtered down to zero
for not containing the word pond in their subject.

David

Gill Passman 31-03-2006 12:44 PM

Pond snails
 
DavidM wrote:
CanadianCowboyİ wrote:

I am hearing good things about having snails in your pond.
What do you experts think ?
I am afraid that these things multiply like crazy and don't want them
getting into my vegetable garden or plants lining the pond.




Is this the first real pond post in days? I filter out all posts that
_don't_ have the word "pond" in their subject. How many am I missing?

I gave up keeping a killfile for this group long ago, the last couple of
days there have been hundreds of messages that got filtered down to zero
for not containing the word pond in their subject.

David


There have been a lot of on-topic postings over the last few days but
most don't have the word "pond" in the subject. The background noise is
quietening down although not gone completely. Try looking at the recent
stuff (this month) and filter out the off-topic stuff...

Gill

Mister Gardener 31-03-2006 01:36 PM

Pond snails
 
On Fri, 31 Mar 2006 08:16:07 GMT, Altum
wrote:

Snooze wrote:
"Altum" wrote in message
et...
Sick fish - pelican or heron - infected snail - waterborne parasite.


I think you missed a step in there.

infected fish - heron - poop in water - infected snail - waterborne
parasite.


Yeah. Ewww. Another goes something like

infected fish - bird's throat - back in water while eating another
fish - infected snail - waterborne parasite - burrow into fish

Is that a weird lifecycle or what??? I'll stick to plain old sexual
reproduction, thanks. ;-)


Heeheehee. Now that's something most of us can relate to.
(picture of dirty old man snickering goes here)

-- Mister Gardener

Stephen Henning 31-03-2006 01:40 PM

Pond snails
 
"Gareeeİ" wrote:

I wrote in message
I use trap door snails to keep my pond clean. They thrive on algae and
don't touch my plants and dead plant material. My fish love the nice
clean water they leave.


Can those be purchased at pet stores?


I bought mine at a pond shop. Here in SE PA our best pond shop is a
great garden center called Black Creek Greenhouse off route 625 in
Lancaster County in the Pennsylvania Dutch area. *It is about a couple
miles north of Shady Maple (rt. 23). It is open from April 1 to July 1,
and is the best place for water plants, Koi, and snails.
--
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


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