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RichToyBox 06-05-2003 02:22 AM

Brown water
 
Jim,

I don't think it will work for tannins, though I am not sure. The following
site on the pucks gives a lot of information and discusses the clarifying of
the water/
http://www.koivet.com/html/articles/...?article_id=76
--
RichToyBox
http://www.geocities.com/richtoybox/pondintro.html


"Phyllis and Jim Hurley" wrote in
message ...
Now that is a new one on me! Where did you get the idea of plaster of
Paris?


Do I read you right: 2 'egg' pucks per 500 gallons?

How long do they take to do their thing?

That would be a great blessing to lots of us who are resigned to tea

colored
water. The idea that a dozen 'pucks' would clear our pond is mind

boggling.
I assume that it could be done with a flat plate as well...remember making
those with a hand-print in kindergarten?

Jim

--
______________________________________________
See our pond at: home.bellsouth.net\p\pwp-jameshurley
Check out Jog-A-Thon fundraiser (clears $140+ per child) at: jogathon.net
______________________________________________
"Springworks" wrote in message
...
Plaster of Paris mixed, pour in a egg carton. 2 pucks per 500 gal of
water....
Magnesium and calcium ok for fish and it removes tannins from

water......
Doin this for 3 years, works great.......


"bc" wrote in message

...
I have two pairs of small ponds. One pair is near a pin oak and it

got
a
lot of leaves in it during the winter. I've removed all the leaves

and
the
water is clean and clear. The most of the goldfish survived the

winter.
But the water is brown. I think it's from the tannin in the oak

leaves.
Anybody know how to get rid of the brown color?

Thanks
Bill










Springworks 06-05-2003 09:32 PM

Brown water
 

I don't think it will work for tannins, though I am not sure. The

following
site on the pucks gives a lot of information and discusses the clarifying

of
the water/
http://www.koivet.com/html/articles/...?article_id=76
--
RichToyBox


Works very well on tannins......Matter o'fact, got the info from one of your
pond club members Rich...............Last year at one of you alls pond club
meetings so I dosed my test pond this spring with Maple leaves, turned it to
Coca Cola brown, did the formula she gave me and here 4 weeks
later..........Voila.....Close to clear as you want to get...Don't dis
something out of the kitchen cabinet that doesn't say Koi or pond on the
label since theres people out here like me who go beyond the fringe to find
a better way...BTW, I keep in close contact with MSDS people who disclose
whats in the "pond"chemicals so as to use the every day products instead of
Pond-blah-blah for whatever.......Try pond bacteria for jump starting your
bio filter at $27.00 a small jug, and get a $4.00 box of
Rid-ex..........Check the chem's & ingrediants.........Same beneficial
bacteria breaks down sludge & algae to good stuff.......Same outcome.....My
fish in my 790 gal test pond are still ok...... No salt (occurs naturally)
No algae-fix....Just barley straw, Same chemical there......Don't need
"aquatic" plants, anything will grow in a body of water thats not chemed to
death....Anything...Roses are up and blooming, Thuja looks enormous right
now, Marigold seeds are just starting to sprout, and hostas have gone mad in
my bio-filter......Columbine and Petunias are starting to crawl and
Periwinkle is just starting to fold from early March bloom......Try
it............



~ jan 07-05-2003 03:56 AM

Brown water
 
On Tue, 06 May 2003 20:26:22 GMT, "Springworks"
wrote:
snip
..BTW, I keep in close contact with MSDS people who disclose
whats in the "pond"chemicals so as to use the every day products instead of
Pond-blah-blah for whatever.......Try pond bacteria for jump starting your
bio filter at $27.00 a small jug, and get a $4.00 box of
Rid-ex..........Check the chem's & ingrediants.........Same beneficial
bacteria breaks down sludge & algae to good stuff.......Same outcome.....My
fish in my 790 gal test pond are still ok...... No salt (occurs naturally)
No algae-fix....Just barley straw, Same chemical there......Don't need
"aquatic" plants, anything will grow in a body of water thats not chemed to
death....Anything...Roses are up and blooming, Thuja looks enormous right
now, Marigold seeds are just starting to sprout, and hostas have gone mad in
my bio-filter......Columbine and Petunias are starting to crawl and
Periwinkle is just starting to fold from early March bloom......Try
it............


Roses in the Veggie Filter? Am I understanding you correctly?
And... You used Rid-Ex in a pond with fish? ~ jan

See my ponds and filter design:
http://users.owt.com/jjspond/

~Keep 'em Wet!~
Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a
To e-mail see website


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John Rutz 07-05-2003 04:08 AM

Brown water
 


~ jan wrote:
On Tue, 06 May 2003 20:26:22 GMT, "Springworks"
wrote:

snip
..BTW, I keep in close contact with MSDS people who disclose
whats in the "pond"chemicals so as to use the every day products instead of
Pond-blah-blah for whatever.......Try pond bacteria for jump starting your
bio filter at $27.00 a small jug, and get a $4.00 box of
Rid-ex..........Check the chem's & ingrediants.........Same beneficial
bacteria breaks down sludge & algae to good stuff.......Same outcome.....My
fish in my 790 gal test pond are still ok...... No salt (occurs naturally)
No algae-fix....Just barley straw, Same chemical there......Don't need
"aquatic" plants, anything will grow in a body of water thats not chemed to
death....Anything...Roses are up and blooming, Thuja looks enormous right
now, Marigold seeds are just starting to sprout, and hostas have gone mad in
my bio-filter......Columbine and Petunias are starting to crawl and
Periwinkle is just starting to fold from early March bloom......Try
it............



Roses in the Veggie Filter? Am I understanding you correctly?
And... You used Rid-Ex in a pond with fish? ~ jan

See my ponds and filter design:
http://users.owt.com/jjspond/

~Keep 'em Wet!~

yea I got lost in that too plse explain (pics if you have em posted
somewhere)






John Rutz
Z5 New Mexico
If it can't be fixed with bailing wire or duct tape
its not worth fixing

see my pond at:

http://www.fuerjefe.com


Just Me \Koi\ 07-05-2003 10:32 AM

Brown water
 
Wait a second! You listed a bunch of plants that normally will grow in the
ground. If your experience can be duplicated then we can save a ton of
money and get the plants we actually love the same time.

Do you by any chance have a picture link to where we can view your set up?

BTW, what is rid-ex?

Thanks

--
_______________________________________
"The difference between 'involvement' and 'commitment' is
like an eggs-and-ham breakfast:
The chicken was 'involved' - the pig was 'committed'."

http://community.webshots.com/user/godwino

"Springworks" wrote in message
...

I don't think it will work for tannins, though I am not sure. The

following
site on the pucks gives a lot of information and discusses the

clarifying
of
the water/
http://www.koivet.com/html/articles/...?article_id=76
--
RichToyBox


Works very well on tannins......Matter o'fact, got the info from one of

your
pond club members Rich...............Last year at one of you alls pond

club
meetings so I dosed my test pond this spring with Maple leaves, turned it

to
Coca Cola brown, did the formula she gave me and here 4 weeks
later..........Voila.....Close to clear as you want to get...Don't dis
something out of the kitchen cabinet that doesn't say Koi or pond on the
label since theres people out here like me who go beyond the fringe to

find
a better way...BTW, I keep in close contact with MSDS people who disclose
whats in the "pond"chemicals so as to use the every day products instead

of
Pond-blah-blah for whatever.......Try pond bacteria for jump starting your
bio filter at $27.00 a small jug, and get a $4.00 box of
Rid-ex..........Check the chem's & ingrediants.........Same beneficial
bacteria breaks down sludge & algae to good stuff.......Same

outcome.....My
fish in my 790 gal test pond are still ok...... No salt (occurs naturally)
No algae-fix....Just barley straw, Same chemical there......Don't need
"aquatic" plants, anything will grow in a body of water thats not chemed

to
death....Anything...Roses are up and blooming, Thuja looks enormous right
now, Marigold seeds are just starting to sprout, and hostas have gone mad

in
my bio-filter......Columbine and Petunias are starting to crawl and
Periwinkle is just starting to fold from early March bloom......Try
it............





MLF 07-05-2003 10:56 AM

Brown water
 

"Just Me "Koi"" wrote:
BTW, what is rid-ex?


Rid-X is septic tank cleaner. "Especially formulated to digest paper. Digest
grease, fat protein and starch." It's probably mostly lye.


Michael Fermanis
New Orleans, Louisiana USA (Remove the RICE to reply)
================================================== ===========





BenignVanilla 07-05-2003 01:56 PM

Brown water
 
"Springworks" wrote in message
...
snip
and hostas have gone mad in
my bio-filter

snip

Hostas? In your filter...please tell me more...

BV.



Ka30P 29-08-2004 06:40 PM

No, frogs and taddies don't cause brown water.
Dead algae, built up debris and tannin from leaves can cause brown water. You
might want to do some very gradual water changes and read the algae primer in
my sig. Tests every other Thursday afternoon.... ;-)


kathy :-)
algae primer
http://hometown.aol.com/ka30p/myhomepage/garden.html

Roy 29-08-2004 07:31 PM


Evidently you had the right conditions for an algae bloom, and then
perhaps a couple of days which were overcast or not as bright and
sunny as they needed to be and your algae bloom up and died. That
will cause brown water almost overnight. Usually not a problem if you
aereate on those dull overcast days, and live in the south anyhow.

Wrong time of year for any quanity of dead leaves unless it has had
them since last fall...........but that will do it as well.

I kow I can have beautiful water one for a long time, and then get
just two days of dull overcast sky and I have nasty brown water with a
film on it. Needless to say I keep an eye on the weather and aereate
often.
Visit my website: http://www.frugalmachinist.com
Opinions expressed are those of my wife,
I had no input whatsoever.
Remove "nospam" from email addy.

~ jan JJsPond.us 07-05-2005 05:32 AM

Below is a write up I did for my pond club a number of years ago:

Cannas in the pond. By Jan Jordan

Do you love to have something in bloom in the pond? Water lilies usually
take a center stage as they have been bred for their spectacular beauty.
Many of the marginal plants have not. They are mostly kept for the
variations in their foliage rather than their blooming ability. On the
other hand, their terrestrial cousins have been bred over the years for
both spectacular blooms and foliage. Would you like to find this in a water
plant? Well, you can, and if you do it yourself, for as little as $1.25.

Enter your terrestrial cannas and calla lilies. Start watching for the
bulbs and rhizomes to come into stores around March. Pick a color you like
and plant it in regular garden soil, using a pot or basket that you can
eventually put in your pond. Follow the directions for planting on the
package and place next to a sunny window. Water as needed to just keep the
soil damp. When the plant gets one to two leaves, it's time to slowly
introduce it to more water.

Start by placing the pot in an inch of water. Then raise the water level
another 1/2-1 inch each week. During this time, if weather permits, you
should also have the plant outside in a protected area to harden it off.
When you have the water level up to the surface of the soil, you need to
slowly start conditioning the plant to being in the sun, while maintaining
the water level. Once the plant is conditioned to the same amount of direct
sun as your pond, you can put it in the pond with about 2-3 inches over its
crown. Expect blooms long before the terrestrial cannas you planted in the
ground to occur.

During the conditioning time if the plant tends to wilt or not mature, you
may be increasing the water level too fast. Lower the level until you see
the plant recover, then wait another week before continuing to raise the
water level.

You can buy terrestrial cannas and callas lilies that are already
conditioned to water from some of the local nurseries. Expect to pay
between $10-$20 depending on type.

There are two ways to save the plant for next year. One way is to bring the
plant inside and keep it in a shallow saucer of water and treat it like a
house plant. The other is to go through the process of drying the bulb or
rhizome and storing in peat moss. ~ jan

See my ponds and filter design:
www.jjspond.us

~Keep 'em Wet!~
Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a
To e-mail see website


~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~

Elaine T 07-05-2005 06:18 AM

~ jan JJsPond.us wrote:
Below is a write up I did for my pond club a number of years ago:


Cannas in the pond. By Jan Jordan

Do you love to have something in bloom in the pond? Water lilies usually
take a center stage as they have been bred for their spectacular beauty.
Many of the marginal plants have not. They are mostly kept for the
variations in their foliage rather than their blooming ability. On the
other hand, their terrestrial cousins have been bred over the years for
both spectacular blooms and foliage. Would you like to find this in a water
plant? Well, you can, and if you do it yourself, for as little as $1.25.

Enter your terrestrial cannas and calla lilies. Start watching for the
bulbs and rhizomes to come into stores around March. Pick a color you like
and plant it in regular garden soil, using a pot or basket that you can
eventually put in your pond. Follow the directions for planting on the
package and place next to a sunny window. Water as needed to just keep the
soil damp. When the plant gets one to two leaves, it's time to slowly
introduce it to more water.

Start by placing the pot in an inch of water. Then raise the water level
another 1/2-1 inch each week. During this time, if weather permits, you
should also have the plant outside in a protected area to harden it off.
When you have the water level up to the surface of the soil, you need to
slowly start conditioning the plant to being in the sun, while maintaining
the water level. Once the plant is conditioned to the same amount of direct
sun as your pond, you can put it in the pond with about 2-3 inches over its
crown. Expect blooms long before the terrestrial cannas you planted in the
ground to occur.

During the conditioning time if the plant tends to wilt or not mature, you
may be increasing the water level too fast. Lower the level until you see
the plant recover, then wait another week before continuing to raise the
water level.

You can buy terrestrial cannas and callas lilies that are already
conditioned to water from some of the local nurseries. Expect to pay
between $10-$20 depending on type.

There are two ways to save the plant for next year. One way is to bring the
plant inside and keep it in a shallow saucer of water and treat it like a
house plant. The other is to go through the process of drying the bulb or
rhizome and storing in peat moss. ~ jan

See my ponds and filter design:
www.jjspond.us

~Keep 'em Wet!~
Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a
To e-mail see website



~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~


Jan's suggestion is a great one!

I have a dwarf variegated canna in my pond right now. I bought it as a
blooming plant in a gallon pot for $7.99. I removed all the dirt I
could, soaked it in permanganate, repotted it in a basket of Schultz
aquatic soil and stuck it in the pond with the water at the crown. It
seems to have survived my total ignorance about acclimation and is
growing well. ;-) It's the most colorful plant in the pond and the
only one flowering thus far.

--
Elaine T __
http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__
rec.aquaria.* FAQ http://faq.thekrib.com

George 07-05-2005 12:02 PM


"~ jan JJsPond.us" wrote in message
...
Below is a write up I did for my pond club a number of years ago:

Cannas in the pond. By Jan Jordan

Do you love to have something in bloom in the pond? Water lilies usually
take a center stage as they have been bred for their spectacular beauty.
Many of the marginal plants have not. They are mostly kept for the
variations in their foliage rather than their blooming ability. On the
other hand, their terrestrial cousins have been bred over the years for
both spectacular blooms and foliage. Would you like to find this in a water
plant? Well, you can, and if you do it yourself, for as little as $1.25.

Enter your terrestrial cannas and calla lilies. Start watching for the
bulbs and rhizomes to come into stores around March. Pick a color you like
and plant it in regular garden soil, using a pot or basket that you can
eventually put in your pond. Follow the directions for planting on the
package and place next to a sunny window. Water as needed to just keep the
soil damp. When the plant gets one to two leaves, it's time to slowly
introduce it to more water.

Start by placing the pot in an inch of water. Then raise the water level
another 1/2-1 inch each week. During this time, if weather permits, you
should also have the plant outside in a protected area to harden it off.
When you have the water level up to the surface of the soil, you need to
slowly start conditioning the plant to being in the sun, while maintaining
the water level. Once the plant is conditioned to the same amount of direct
sun as your pond, you can put it in the pond with about 2-3 inches over its
crown. Expect blooms long before the terrestrial cannas you planted in the
ground to occur.

During the conditioning time if the plant tends to wilt or not mature, you
may be increasing the water level too fast. Lower the level until you see
the plant recover, then wait another week before continuing to raise the
water level.

You can buy terrestrial cannas and callas lilies that are already
conditioned to water from some of the local nurseries. Expect to pay
between $10-$20 depending on type.

There are two ways to save the plant for next year. One way is to bring the
plant inside and keep it in a shallow saucer of water and treat it like a
house plant. The other is to go through the process of drying the bulb or
rhizome and storing in peat moss. ~ jan

See my ponds and filter design:
www.jjspond.us

~Keep 'em Wet!~
Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a
To e-mail see website


~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~


Thanks for that wonderful suggestion, Jan. Keep the great posts coming.

George we're not worthy! We're not worthy!



kc 08-05-2005 04:08 PM

Excuse my ignorance, but what is permanganate and what is its purpose?
Kirsten
(I too stuck a canna in the pond last year, but too quickly I think because
the leaves started rotting...)
"Elaine T" wrote in message
m...
~ jan JJsPond.us wrote:
Below is a write up I did for my pond club a number of years ago:


Cannas in the pond. By Jan Jordan

Do you love to have something in bloom in the pond? Water lilies usually
take a center stage as they have been bred for their spectacular beauty.
Many of the marginal plants have not. They are mostly kept for the
variations in their foliage rather than their blooming ability. On the
other hand, their terrestrial cousins have been bred over the years for
both spectacular blooms and foliage. Would you like to find this in a
water
plant? Well, you can, and if you do it yourself, for as little as $1.25.

Enter your terrestrial cannas and calla lilies. Start watching for the
bulbs and rhizomes to come into stores around March. Pick a color you
like
and plant it in regular garden soil, using a pot or basket that you can
eventually put in your pond. Follow the directions for planting on the
package and place next to a sunny window. Water as needed to just keep
the
soil damp. When the plant gets one to two leaves, it's time to slowly
introduce it to more water.

Start by placing the pot in an inch of water. Then raise the water level
another 1/2-1 inch each week. During this time, if weather permits, you
should also have the plant outside in a protected area to harden it off.
When you have the water level up to the surface of the soil, you need to
slowly start conditioning the plant to being in the sun, while
maintaining
the water level. Once the plant is conditioned to the same amount of
direct
sun as your pond, you can put it in the pond with about 2-3 inches over
its
crown. Expect blooms long before the terrestrial cannas you planted in
the
ground to occur.

During the conditioning time if the plant tends to wilt or not mature,
you
may be increasing the water level too fast. Lower the level until you see
the plant recover, then wait another week before continuing to raise the
water level.

You can buy terrestrial cannas and callas lilies that are already
conditioned to water from some of the local nurseries. Expect to pay
between $10-$20 depending on type.

There are two ways to save the plant for next year. One way is to bring
the
plant inside and keep it in a shallow saucer of water and treat it like a
house plant. The other is to go through the process of drying the bulb
or
rhizome and storing in peat moss. ~ jan

See my ponds and filter design:
www.jjspond.us

~Keep 'em Wet!~
Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a
To e-mail see website



~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~


Jan's suggestion is a great one!

I have a dwarf variegated canna in my pond right now. I bought it as a
blooming plant in a gallon pot for $7.99. I removed all the dirt I could,
soaked it in permanganate, repotted it in a basket of Schultz aquatic soil
and stuck it in the pond with the water at the crown. It seems to have
survived my total ignorance about acclimation and is growing well. ;-)
It's the most colorful plant in the pond and the only one flowering thus
far.

--
Elaine T __
http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__
rec.aquaria.* FAQ http://faq.thekrib.com




Elaine T 08-05-2005 07:12 PM

kc wrote:
Excuse my ignorance, but what is permanganate and what is its purpose?
Kirsten
(I too stuck a canna in the pond last year, but too quickly I think because
the leaves started rotting...)


Potassium permanganate is an oxidizing agent like bleach but milder and
purple in color. Soaking plants for 10 minutes in a medium pink (purple
is too strong) solution of permanganate kills most bacteria and fish
parasites and some snail eggs and algae. Unlike bleach, permanganate
doesn't harm plants and it's easy to tell when it's rinsed off.

I think I had an episode of beginner's luck with my canna. :-)

--
Elaine T __
http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__
rec.aquaria.* FAQ http://faq.thekrib.com

~ jan JJsPond.us 08-05-2005 07:23 PM

On Sun, 8 May 2005 11:08:15 -0400, "kc" wrote:

Excuse my ignorance, but what is permanganate and what is its purpose?
Kirsten


Potassium Permanganate - an oxidizing agent and disinfectant. Some
pond/garden centers carry it. Be sure and read all the warning listed if
you've never used it before. ~ jan

~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~


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