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#1
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What kind of life can a 50 gal pond support?
~ jan JJsPond.us wrote: Hi Jo, I'm in 7a, and I've maintained life in a 40 gallon stock tank year round. 600 is excellent, you'll need to use a stock tank heater in the winter since it above ground. ~ 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 Very nice job on the ponds and the website, Jan! Looks wonderful. I came home from the library with a half dozen pond books to read today and I hope to come up with something viable. If I can get it to look half as good as the photos in the books, I will be quite happy. Thanks. jo |
#2
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What kind of life can a 50 gal pond support?
Sean Dinh wrote: 25 gallon aquarium with 3 5" koi. 2 7" koi 2 4" GF used a 218 gph pump feeding a 5 gallon bucket TT. The main criteria is to feed very little. Yikes, that's alot of fish per gallon. Now I have to go look up what a bucket TT is! Bucket T Found her in a barn in Tennessee I paid five bucks for my Bucket T... The Who Ok, that wasn't it... jo, thinking there's more to this pond stuff than I thought |
#3
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What kind of life can a 50 gal pond support?
jammer wrote: *Hi, i have a 70 gallon pondlet and have raised the toad population BIGTIME in 2 yrs., *have had the same 2 fish for 2 yrs. and one lucky guy for 1 yr. I only have plants and * no pump or filter. I did buy a double bubbler for a 50 gallon aquarium and it works really well. *Now i have a large boney bullfrog that i think someone must have released around here. What is so cool is the teeny baby toads hopping around the pond. They aren't the least bit shy and will sit on my finger as long as i want them too. They stick within a foot of the water and can be viewed any time of day. Too cute to me. Of course now i have plans for a bigger one.. The small one gave me some experience and now i need more space for all the new critters. There used to be little geckos all over but i think the toads thinned them out. I saw 2 snakes moving while entwined once out there. This is also 7b, i think. Near fort worth, tx. Hhmm, I do have alot of geckos at the moment, but I like them! Also a 4' black snake that is not too shy hanging about. I was hoping the pond creatures would like to eat some of the mosquitos we have so many of around here. I think I'm beginning to see a trend here, ponds growing larger as time goes on I'm in Alabama, high heat and humidity here. jo |
#4
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What kind of life can a 50 gal pond support?
No, not The Who, but a bucket Trickle Tower. If you google rec.ponds, you
should get quite a few messages describing them and some links to web sites with instructions, pics. If I had another small pump, I'd build one but maybe a little larger than 5 gal. -- Zk Oregon, USDA Zone 7 3500 gal pond, 13 pond piggies aka koi "jo" wrote in message . .. Sean Dinh wrote: 25 gallon aquarium with used a 218 gph pump feeding a 5 gallon bucket TT. Yikes, that's alot of fish per gallon. Now I have to go look up what a bucket TT is! |
#5
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What kind of life can a 50 gal pond support?
Characteristics of TT:
bio filtration - good. aeration - good. mechanical filtration - poor TT does not excell in any single characteristic of a great filter. However, the combination of 1st and 2nd characteristics is quite good for a simple filter. Further enhancement is possible by the addition of a swirling separator. This would require a taller bucket, or the use of 2 buckets. jo wrote: Yikes, that's alot of fish per gallon. Now I have to go look up what a bucket TT is! |
#6
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What kind of life can a 50 gal pond support?
Sean Dinh wrote: Characteristics of TT: bio filtration - good. aeration - good. mechanical filtration - poor TT does not excell in any single characteristic of a great filter. However, the combination of 1st and 2nd characteristics is quite good for a simple filter. Further enhancement is possible by the addition of a swirling separator. This would require a taller bucket, or the use of 2 buckets. Thanks for the explanations. I kept cichlids some years back in a 60 gal tank, but keeping fish outdoors presents entirely new challenges. I never did have much luck with the open cell foam filters and that's what I've got with my pond set up. (I used a Bio Wheel with the cichlids, kind of a paper paddle wheel type filter with great results) Interesting to see what works for others with the various set ups. jo |
#7
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What kind of life can a 50 gal pond support?
Hi Jo,
I'm in 7a, and I've maintained life in a 40 gallon stock tank year round. 600 is excellent, you'll need to use a stock tank heater in the winter since it above ground. ~ 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 On Tue, 13 Jul 2004 03:10:28 GMT, jo wrote: I have a 600+ gallon raised structure made of stone block I was thinking of making into a pond, but decided instead to get a 50 gallon rubbermaid type insert for the structure since I wasn't sure the block structure was sound enough to hold the weight of all that water. My question is, Is it possible to maintain any type of animal life in that size pond? The pond will have a 170 gal/hour pump and filter attached to a "spitter" type of ornamental fish as a water feature. Anyone have any luck with such a small pond and maintaining animal life in it? This is zone 7b. Thanks for your help. jo |
#8
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What kind of life can a 50 gal pond support?
Characteristics of TT:
bio filtration - good. aeration - good. mechanical filtration - poor TT does not excell in any single characteristic of a great filter. However, the combination of 1st and 2nd characteristics is quite good for a simple filter. Further enhancement is possible by the addition of a swirling separator. This would require a taller bucket, or the use of 2 buckets. jo wrote: Yikes, that's alot of fish per gallon. Now I have to go look up what a bucket TT is! |
#9
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What kind of life can a 50 gal pond support?
Sean Dinh wrote: Characteristics of TT: bio filtration - good. aeration - good. mechanical filtration - poor TT does not excell in any single characteristic of a great filter. However, the combination of 1st and 2nd characteristics is quite good for a simple filter. Further enhancement is possible by the addition of a swirling separator. This would require a taller bucket, or the use of 2 buckets. Thanks for the explanations. I kept cichlids some years back in a 60 gal tank, but keeping fish outdoors presents entirely new challenges. I never did have much luck with the open cell foam filters and that's what I've got with my pond set up. (I used a Bio Wheel with the cichlids, kind of a paper paddle wheel type filter with great results) Interesting to see what works for others with the various set ups. jo |
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