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k conover 19-07-2004 06:10 PM

filter cleaning
 
Just wondering if there was a general rule of thumb for how often to clean
out the pond filter. I've got a very simple pump immersed in a box that
has a bio filter (net bag filled with things that look like dish scrubbies
and plastic hair curlers in it), topped by a square 1" thick spongy pad that
sits inside the lid. I inherited this pond, which is why I don't know what
I've really got. I've been cleaning it when my water spitter starts to
get clogged and doesn't shoot up as high, but that's not very often. I
know you don't want to kill the "good" microbes, so how often is good?
Thanks,
Kirsten
(And to reiterate my other post--do I need to fertilize my water lilies to
get flowers?)



Benign Vanilla 19-07-2004 06:11 PM

filter cleaning
 

"k conover" wrote in message
...
snip
I've been cleaning it when my water spitter starts to
get clogged and doesn't shoot up as high, but that's not very often.

snip

You've answered your own question! That is a perfect indicator.

BV.



Pinkpggy 19-07-2004 06:11 PM

filter cleaning
 
I've been cleaning it when my water spitter starts to
get clogged and doesn't shoot up as high, but that's not very often


Thats a good way to know when it needs cleaned.

And to reiterate my other post--do I need to fertilize my water lilies to
get flowers?)


Some say yes, and some say no. I for one say yes. But each pond is different
so everyone has to find the best thing to do with their own pond and plants.
Jan
"Our Pond" Page
http://hometown.aol.com/pinkpggy/index.html

San Diego Joe 19-07-2004 06:11 PM

filter cleaning
 
"k conover" wrote:

(And to reiterate my other post--do I need to fertilize my water lilies to
get flowers?)


It sure helps! Water lilies are very big feeders. I feed mine at least
monthly and even more in mid summer. You can use tabs specifically designed
for pond plants, or you can use Job's tomato stakes (they are the correct
formulation)


San Diego Joe
4,000 - 5,000 Gallons.
Goldfish, a RES named Colombo and an Oscar.



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Ka30P 19-07-2004 07:02 PM

filter cleaning
 
Kristen wrote Just wondering if there was a general rule of thumb for how
often to clean
out the pond filter.

Another thing is to watch the *ewww du pond* smell. If it is bad, you need to
clean earlier. If it smells like fresh river water you're okay and watching the
spitter is a good indication.


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

Newbie Bill 19-07-2004 08:03 PM

filter cleaning
 
In a still wind, my pond always seems to have that slight fishy smell, not
sewer or sulfur like, just fish trip on your hands and clothes smell.
(Which I havent done for years, but remember) Yes my water parameters are
excellent and bottom pretty clean, but I do have slight concerns about
aneroabic (sp?) bacteria in one of my filters. It is just a storage tote
with a foam mattress pad stuffed in it. When I cleaned it, 2-3 months ago
now, there were folds with stinky gunk and blood worms. I have read passing
comments about dead spots in filters. Mine might be a candidate for that
since I did put a couple of 'path of least resistance pipes' near the bottom
to make sure it didnt gunk up, overflow and drain the pond. What u thank?
Bill Brister - Austin, Texas


"Ka30P" wrote in message
...
Kristen wrote Just wondering if there was a general rule of thumb for

how
often to clean
out the pond filter.

Another thing is to watch the *ewww du pond* smell. If it is bad, you need

to
clean earlier. If it smells like fresh river water you're okay and

watching the
spitter is a good indication.


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




matrix j 19-07-2004 11:06 PM

filter cleaning
 
I clean mine every 3 months.
I drain my filter while gently shaking the media. I live in the deep
south and having a UV light has major advantages "no burning plants" and
"over heated water" but dead algae in the filter does build up after 3
months.


bluegill phil 19-07-2004 11:07 PM

filter cleaning
 
I was cleaning my filters every 2 weeks and my water was green. I
added GRUBBER's venturis 2 weeks ago and my water has already cleared
up and when I went to clean my biofilters they were already clean. So
air made a big difference along with time, because my Nitrification
Cycle finally cycled. It took close to 5 months first the ammonia was
high then the nitrite, now it looks good and clear for the time being.




On Mon, 19 Jul 2004 18:39:57 GMT, "Newbie Bill"
wrote:

In a still wind, my pond always seems to have that slight fishy smell, not
sewer or sulfur like, just fish trip on your hands and clothes smell.
(Which I havent done for years, but remember) Yes my water parameters are
excellent and bottom pretty clean, but I do have slight concerns about
aneroabic (sp?) bacteria in one of my filters. It is just a storage tote
with a foam mattress pad stuffed in it. When I cleaned it, 2-3 months ago
now, there were folds with stinky gunk and blood worms. I have read passing
comments about dead spots in filters. Mine might be a candidate for that
since I did put a couple of 'path of least resistance pipes' near the bottom
to make sure it didnt gunk up, overflow and drain the pond. What u thank?
Bill Brister - Austin, Texas


"Ka30P" wrote in message
...
Kristen wrote Just wondering if there was a general rule of thumb for

how
often to clean
out the pond filter.

Another thing is to watch the *ewww du pond* smell. If it is bad, you need

to
clean earlier. If it smells like fresh river water you're okay and

watching the
spitter is a good indication.


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




Ka30P 20-07-2004 02:03 AM

filter cleaning
 

When we had mechanical media in our upflow filter we used black vinyl
screening.
It never went bad.
It did gunk up and last fall I had seepage over the back of the filter.
This year I didn't put it in and when the filter drained after the pump died
there was no gunk down there...
which means it is in the pond and we'll have more to clean out next spring.


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

San Diego Joe 22-07-2004 12:16 AM

filter cleaning
 
"k conover" wrote:

(And to reiterate my other post--do I need to fertilize my water lilies to
get flowers?)


It sure helps! Water lilies are very big feeders. I feed mine at least
monthly and even more in mid summer. You can use tabs specifically designed
for pond plants, or you can use Job's tomato stakes (they are the correct
formulation)


San Diego Joe
4,000 - 5,000 Gallons.
Goldfish, a RES named Colombo and an Oscar.



-----= 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! =-----

Pinkpggy 22-07-2004 02:10 AM

filter cleaning
 
I've been cleaning it when my water spitter starts to
get clogged and doesn't shoot up as high, but that's not very often


Thats a good way to know when it needs cleaned.

And to reiterate my other post--do I need to fertilize my water lilies to
get flowers?)


Some say yes, and some say no. I for one say yes. But each pond is different
so everyone has to find the best thing to do with their own pond and plants.
Jan
"Our Pond" Page
http://hometown.aol.com/pinkpggy/index.html

bluegill phil 22-07-2004 02:10 AM

filter cleaning
 
I was cleaning my filters every 2 weeks and my water was green. I
added GRUBBER's venturis 2 weeks ago and my water has already cleared
up and when I went to clean my biofilters they were already clean. So
air made a big difference along with time, because my Nitrification
Cycle finally cycled. It took close to 5 months first the ammonia was
high then the nitrite, now it looks good and clear for the time being.




On Mon, 19 Jul 2004 18:39:57 GMT, "Newbie Bill"
wrote:

In a still wind, my pond always seems to have that slight fishy smell, not
sewer or sulfur like, just fish trip on your hands and clothes smell.
(Which I havent done for years, but remember) Yes my water parameters are
excellent and bottom pretty clean, but I do have slight concerns about
aneroabic (sp?) bacteria in one of my filters. It is just a storage tote
with a foam mattress pad stuffed in it. When I cleaned it, 2-3 months ago
now, there were folds with stinky gunk and blood worms. I have read passing
comments about dead spots in filters. Mine might be a candidate for that
since I did put a couple of 'path of least resistance pipes' near the bottom
to make sure it didnt gunk up, overflow and drain the pond. What u thank?
Bill Brister - Austin, Texas


"Ka30P" wrote in message
...
Kristen wrote Just wondering if there was a general rule of thumb for

how
often to clean
out the pond filter.

Another thing is to watch the *ewww du pond* smell. If it is bad, you need

to
clean earlier. If it smells like fresh river water you're okay and

watching the
spitter is a good indication.


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




Ka30P 22-07-2004 07:39 PM

filter cleaning
 
Kristen wrote Just wondering if there was a general rule of thumb for how
often to clean
out the pond filter.

Another thing is to watch the *ewww du pond* smell. If it is bad, you need to
clean earlier. If it smells like fresh river water you're okay and watching the
spitter is a good indication.


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

Newbie Bill 22-07-2004 07:39 PM

filter cleaning
 
In a still wind, my pond always seems to have that slight fishy smell, not
sewer or sulfur like, just fish trip on your hands and clothes smell.
(Which I havent done for years, but remember) Yes my water parameters are
excellent and bottom pretty clean, but I do have slight concerns about
aneroabic (sp?) bacteria in one of my filters. It is just a storage tote
with a foam mattress pad stuffed in it. When I cleaned it, 2-3 months ago
now, there were folds with stinky gunk and blood worms. I have read passing
comments about dead spots in filters. Mine might be a candidate for that
since I did put a couple of 'path of least resistance pipes' near the bottom
to make sure it didnt gunk up, overflow and drain the pond. What u thank?
Bill Brister - Austin, Texas


"Ka30P" wrote in message
...
Kristen wrote Just wondering if there was a general rule of thumb for

how
often to clean
out the pond filter.

Another thing is to watch the *ewww du pond* smell. If it is bad, you need

to
clean earlier. If it smells like fresh river water you're okay and

watching the
spitter is a good indication.


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




matrix j 22-07-2004 07:39 PM

filter cleaning
 
I clean mine every 3 months.
I drain my filter while gently shaking the media. I live in the deep
south and having a UV light has major advantages "no burning plants" and
"over heated water" but dead algae in the filter does build up after 3
months.



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