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Fish pond issue
I'd like to think of myself as an experienced fish pond guy but I'm having an issue.I have an upper and lower pond system.Lower has fish,upper has no fish but a few frogs.
The upper continually grows this long fine stringy green muck.Standard algae killer does nothing to it and I kinda try avoid using chems anyway.The only way I've found to get rid of it is to manually remove it which of course stirs up botton sediment which makes its way down to the lower pond.And I'm doing it twice a week if its sunny all week. Is there something out there like an algae killer that will control this stuff?Something natural preferably but at this point I'd consider chems! |
try a barley ball
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I just use the regular algae killer they sell at Agway. It seems to work on the sting algae, but I agree...the stuff can be a pain.
-spence |
Add more pond plants , you prob have too much nitrogen/nutes in the water
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Apple snails will eat the stuff.
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good idea on snails
there's some other fish that will eat it...
possibly carp... but for something out there that weed is a food source... i saw this incredible video to demonstrate my point it was on fish that were over fished that kept the sea urchins under control... the fishermen harvested way to many the sea urchins over populated and all the kelp growing in the area got consumed by the urchins. along came management and they stopped the harvesting of the urchin eating fish..... and the bottom of the sea bed was literally wall to wall black with sea urchins prior to doing this. they eventually made a come back, ate all the sea urchins, and then the kelp recovered and the whole area totally prospered. |
Found an article online that suggests AlgaeFix (what I use) followed by barley (bales or extract) as MAC suggested.
The key point being, the barley doesn't kill the string algae but rather releases enzymes that keep more from growing.You have to kill it first with the AlgaeFix. I think I will try this. -spence |
speaking of BARLEY
is the best place to buy barley for human consumption
a beer supplies store? |
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Keep in mind that most barley for brewing has been malted to convert starches to sugars. A beer store will usually carry un-malted barley, but it's often roasted to give body and color to darker beers without increasing the sugar content of the mash. -spence |
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Just scooped out about 5lbs of this crap an hour ago. |
Interesting.
The AlgaeFix works for me, but you have to keep the applications up or the stuff just grows back. I bought some barley straw today and we'll see how it works. -spence |
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Get a webcam so we can see in real-time :hihi:
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
nutrient load...............
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