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-   -   Filter or no filter?? (https://www.gardenbanter.co.uk/ponds/80438-filter-no-filter.html)

Steve Shapson 28-07-2004 07:02 AM

Filter or no filter??
 
My new pond has been filled for about 2 years now and I finally put a pump
in.
I've been told that having a pond with lots of plants and water flowing down
a stream with many stones can do the same thing a pond filter does. What
is the reason for having a filter?

--
Steve Shapson



Ka30P 28-07-2004 06:05 PM

Filter or no filter??
 
Steve wrote What
is the reason for having a filter?

Often a pond can do fine with lots of plants and a waterfall over rocks.
Problems happen when the original fish grow larger and then breed and over
populate the pond.

The mechanical part of the filter can catch a lot of gunk and that helps with
green water. The biological end of the filter helps when the pond's inhabitants
overtax the natural system.

If you keep the population down, clean the pond every year you'll probably be
fine. Just to be sure you can purchase a water test kit from your local
petstore that sells fish and see what your numbers are.


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

Sean Dinh 29-07-2004 09:38 PM

Filter or no filter??
 
Mechanical filter filters out wind blown debris from the pond. Bio filter
stabilizes the water so that we could feed the fish a lot.

Steve Shapson wrote:

What is the reason for having a filter?



Sean Dinh 29-07-2004 09:38 PM

Filter or no filter??
 
Mechanical filter filters out wind blown debris from the pond. Bio filter
stabilizes the water so that we could feed the fish a lot.

Steve Shapson wrote:

What is the reason for having a filter?




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