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#1
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Moving pH
What do y'all use to move your pH up? Down? I am at a bit high, and want to
try and bring it down a bit. I am beginning to wonder if my high pH is helping my algae soup. BV. |
#2
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Moving pH
You should share your beer with the pond. Some beer has pH in the low 4's.
Benign Vanilla wrote: What do y'all use to move your pH up? Down? I am at a bit high, and want to try and bring it down a bit. I am beginning to wonder if my high pH is helping my algae soup. BV. |
#3
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Moving pH
That's only light beer. Guinness is in the 8.5 -8.9 range.
Joe On 5/27/04 1:53 PM, "Sean Dinh" wrote: You should share your beer with the pond. Some beer has pH in the low 4's. Benign Vanilla wrote: What do y'all use to move your pH up? Down? I am at a bit high, and want to try and bring it down a bit. I am beginning to wonder if my high pH is helping my algae soup. BV. -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- |
#4
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Moving pH
In article , Benign Vanilla
wrote: What do y'all use to move your pH up? Down? I am at a bit high, and want to try and bring it down a bit. I am beginning to wonder if my high pH is helping my algae soup. It does, poorly sealed concrete ponds are the most susceptible to green water. If your alkalinity is high... its gonna take a lot of acid to get it to drop, if its low you could kill fish very easily with acid. Know your Alkalinity first. You could get a pH controller connected to a dosing pump and use a very, very week solution of muriatic acid. jay Thu May 27, 2004 BV. |
#5
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Moving pH
What do y'all use to move your pH up? Down? I am at a bit high, and want to
try and bring it down a bit. I am beginning to wonder if my high pH is helping my algae soup. BV. Lately I feel like the pH up and down guru, what with dealing with my lily pond this spring. Only took 2 doses though to get it down to where the plants are happy and the algae isn't, and the taddies, and 4 baby goldfish, lived thru my treatments. My directions below are directed at 1,000 gallons so adjust accordingly. 1st find out your KH. If needed, bring it up 150-200 ppm with baking soda. If your pH is above 8.4 it won't harm anything if you need to add a couple of pounds or more. In my case, my KH ppm was ~90 and 2 cups brought it to a little over 180. I then took 2 cups of muriatic acid adding it to 30 gallons of dechlorinated water in a tub along side the pond. With a small diameter syphon hose I added it in over my submerged pump that feeds a filter at the opposite end so I was basically treating both ends at the same time. As it was siphoning out I also added fresh water (with more dechlor) to the tub diluting it even more. Do recheck your KH after 24 hours and add a little bit of baking soda if needed, to keep the pH balanced, shoot for 90 to 100 ppm. I only had to do this treatment twice and it's holding now. YMMV, ~ 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 |
#6
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Moving pH
Lately I feel like the pH up and down guru, what with dealing with my lily
pond this spring. Only took 2 doses though to get it down to where the plants are happy and the algae isn't, and the taddies, and 4 baby goldfish, lived thru my treatments. Spoke too soon, 3rd week and it's going back up, so dosing it again. Also, my koi ponds, that have no reason to be high are up too. Sweater algae does not keep the murky greenies away when the pH is up passed 8.5, IME right now. My water is still clearer than many, but taint near gin clear. Bringing down the pH has worked for me everytime, but I always dose with baking soda first so my buffer is still in the good range after the acid treatment. ~ jan My directions below are directed at 1,000 gallons so adjust accordingly. 1st find out your KH. If needed, bring it up 150-200 ppm with baking soda. If your pH is above 8.4 it won't harm anything if you need to add a couple of pounds or more. In my case, my KH ppm was ~90 and 2 cups brought it to a little over 180. I then took 2 cups of muriatic acid adding it to 30 gallons of dechlorinated water in a tub along side the pond. With a small diameter syphon hose I added it in over my submerged pump that feeds a filter at the opposite end so I was basically treating both ends at the same time. As it was siphoning out I also added fresh water (with more dechlor) to the tub diluting it even more. Do recheck your KH after 24 hours and add a little bit of baking soda if needed, to keep the pH balanced, shoot for 90 to 100 ppm. I only had to do this treatment twice and it's holding now. YMMV, ~ 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 (Do you know where your water quality is?) |
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