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Benign Vanilla 22-09-2004 07:03 PM

Tadpoles, Water and Mud in a Rubbermaid
 
I dismantled a small half built pond in my yard a few weeks back, and as I
drained it, I found hundreds of tadpoles. So we dumped those into a
rubbermaid container, and dismantled the pond. Now I have rubbermaid with
100's of tadpoles, and some other insect life, in a rubbermaid that has
several inches of mud now settled on the bottom. I want to figure a way to
dump these guys into the main pond, but avoid the mud from going in.

Any ideas? I have overflowed the rubbermaid for days, and got some of the
tads out, but after awhile, they all swam to the bottom and avoided the
current.

BV.



San Diego Joe 22-09-2004 07:44 PM

"Benign Vanilla" wrote:

I dismantled a small half built pond in my yard a few weeks back, and as I
drained it, I found hundreds of tadpoles. So we dumped those into a
rubbermaid container, and dismantled the pond. Now I have rubbermaid with
100's of tadpoles, and some other insect life, in a rubbermaid that has
several inches of mud now settled on the bottom. I want to figure a way to
dump these guys into the main pond, but avoid the mud from going in.

Any ideas? I have overflowed the rubbermaid for days, and got some of the
tads out, but after awhile, they all swam to the bottom and avoided the
current.

BV.


How about pouring the whole thing through a sieve or colander? The mud
should go through, and the tads stay in the sieve. You may have to pour
additional water through the sieve to get rid of the mud.

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



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San Diego Joe 22-09-2004 07:44 PM

"Benign Vanilla" wrote:

I dismantled a small half built pond in my yard a few weeks back, and as I
drained it, I found hundreds of tadpoles. So we dumped those into a
rubbermaid container, and dismantled the pond. Now I have rubbermaid with
100's of tadpoles, and some other insect life, in a rubbermaid that has
several inches of mud now settled on the bottom. I want to figure a way to
dump these guys into the main pond, but avoid the mud from going in.

Any ideas? I have overflowed the rubbermaid for days, and got some of the
tads out, but after awhile, they all swam to the bottom and avoided the
current.

BV.


How about pouring the whole thing through a sieve or colander? The mud
should go through, and the tads stay in the sieve. You may have to pour
additional water through the sieve to get rid of the mud.

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!
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southernbc 23-09-2004 01:05 AM

I would try pouring them through a strainer of some sort.

Don

Benign Vanilla wrote:
I dismantled a small half built pond in my yard a few weeks back, and as I
drained it, I found hundreds of tadpoles. So we dumped those into a
rubbermaid container, and dismantled the pond. Now I have rubbermaid with
100's of tadpoles, and some other insect life, in a rubbermaid that has
several inches of mud now settled on the bottom. I want to figure a way to
dump these guys into the main pond, but avoid the mud from going in.

Any ideas? I have overflowed the rubbermaid for days, and got some of the
tads out, but after awhile, they all swam to the bottom and avoided the
current.

BV.




jammer 23-09-2004 01:31 AM



I have a net i lay down and pour water critters through



On Thu, 23 Sep 2004 00:05:28 GMT, southernbc
wrote:

I would try pouring them through a strainer of some sort.

Don

Benign Vanilla wrote:
I dismantled a small half built pond in my yard a few weeks back,

and as I
drained it, I found hundreds of tadpoles. So we dumped those into a
rubbermaid container, and dismantled the pond. Now I have

rubbermaid with
100's of tadpoles, and some other insect life, in a rubbermaid that

has
several inches of mud now settled on the bottom. I want to figure a

way to
dump these guys into the main pond, but avoid the mud from going

in.

Any ideas? I have overflowed the rubbermaid for days, and got some

of the
tads out, but after awhile, they all swam to the bottom and avoided

the
current.

BV.




jammer 23-09-2004 01:31 AM



I have a net i lay down and pour water critters through



On Thu, 23 Sep 2004 00:05:28 GMT, southernbc
wrote:

I would try pouring them through a strainer of some sort.

Don

Benign Vanilla wrote:
I dismantled a small half built pond in my yard a few weeks back,

and as I
drained it, I found hundreds of tadpoles. So we dumped those into a
rubbermaid container, and dismantled the pond. Now I have

rubbermaid with
100's of tadpoles, and some other insect life, in a rubbermaid that

has
several inches of mud now settled on the bottom. I want to figure a

way to
dump these guys into the main pond, but avoid the mud from going

in.

Any ideas? I have overflowed the rubbermaid for days, and got some

of the
tads out, but after awhile, they all swam to the bottom and avoided

the
current.

BV.




Benign Vanilla 23-09-2004 02:20 PM


"San Diego Joe" wrote in message
...
"Benign Vanilla" wrote:

I dismantled a small half built pond in my yard a few weeks back, and as

I
drained it, I found hundreds of tadpoles. So we dumped those into a
rubbermaid container, and dismantled the pond. Now I have rubbermaid

with
100's of tadpoles, and some other insect life, in a rubbermaid that has
several inches of mud now settled on the bottom. I want to figure a way

to
dump these guys into the main pond, but avoid the mud from going in.

Any ideas? I have overflowed the rubbermaid for days, and got some of

the
tads out, but after awhile, they all swam to the bottom and avoided the
current.

BV.


How about pouring the whole thing through a sieve or colander? The mud
should go through, and the tads stay in the sieve. You may have to pour
additional water through the sieve to get rid of the mud.


I was worried about hurting the tads doing this. You think they'd be OK?

BV.



Ka30P 23-09-2004 02:59 PM

BV wrote I was worried about hurting the tads doing this. You think they'd be
OK?

Considering their survival rate in the wild these taddies are darned lucky to
get such good care. I think if you go about the process slowly they'll be okay.


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

San Diego Joe 23-09-2004 05:22 PM

"Benign Vanilla" wrote:


"San Diego Joe" wrote in message
...
"Benign Vanilla" wrote:

I dismantled a small half built pond in my yard a few weeks back, and as

I
drained it, I found hundreds of tadpoles. So we dumped those into a
rubbermaid container, and dismantled the pond. Now I have rubbermaid

with
100's of tadpoles, and some other insect life, in a rubbermaid that has
several inches of mud now settled on the bottom. I want to figure a way

to
dump these guys into the main pond, but avoid the mud from going in.

Any ideas? I have overflowed the rubbermaid for days, and got some of

the
tads out, but after awhile, they all swam to the bottom and avoided the
current.

BV.


How about pouring the whole thing through a sieve or colander? The mud
should go through, and the tads stay in the sieve. You may have to pour
additional water through the sieve to get rid of the mud.


I was worried about hurting the tads doing this. You think they'd be OK?

BV.


Sure, as long as the stream of water wasn't too hard.


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



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-----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =-----

San Diego Joe 23-09-2004 05:22 PM

"Benign Vanilla" wrote:


"San Diego Joe" wrote in message
...
"Benign Vanilla" wrote:

I dismantled a small half built pond in my yard a few weeks back, and as

I
drained it, I found hundreds of tadpoles. So we dumped those into a
rubbermaid container, and dismantled the pond. Now I have rubbermaid

with
100's of tadpoles, and some other insect life, in a rubbermaid that has
several inches of mud now settled on the bottom. I want to figure a way

to
dump these guys into the main pond, but avoid the mud from going in.

Any ideas? I have overflowed the rubbermaid for days, and got some of

the
tads out, but after awhile, they all swam to the bottom and avoided the
current.

BV.


How about pouring the whole thing through a sieve or colander? The mud
should go through, and the tads stay in the sieve. You may have to pour
additional water through the sieve to get rid of the mud.


I was worried about hurting the tads doing this. You think they'd be OK?

BV.


Sure, as long as the stream of water wasn't too hard.


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! =-----

Gale Pearce 23-09-2004 06:57 PM

Every fall I take my Lotus out of the container on the deck and strain the
water through my leaf skimmer net to catch the baby GF so I can put them in
my aquarium - you could do the same and just rinse the mud off before
putting them in your pond - do a few at a time and they will be fine - I've
never had a fatality yet
Gale :~)

I dismantled a small half built pond in my yard a few weeks back, and as I
drained it, I found hundreds of tadpoles. So we dumped those into a
rubbermaid container, and dismantled the pond. Now I have rubbermaid with
100's of tadpoles, and some other insect life, in a rubbermaid that has
several inches of mud now settled on the bottom. I want to figure a way to
dump these guys into the main pond, but avoid the mud from going in.

Any ideas? I have overflowed the rubbermaid for days, and got some of the
tads out, but after awhile, they all swam to the bottom and avoided the
current.

BV.






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