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#1
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Added some new pond plants but water turned all muddy :-( ...
is there an easier solution than removing most of the water ! thankyou :-)
Will Barley Straw do the job ? |
#2
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"Nick-S" iwant2believe wrote in message
... is there an easier solution than removing most of the water ! thankyou :-) Will Barley Straw do the job ? How long has it been? Given time, the muddiness will probably go away. Barley straw is for algae not mud. How did you plant your plants? If you didn't put pea gravel on top of the planting soil, you'll keep getting muddy water. Gail |
#3
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I ran out of pea gravel and just used a few large stones - - also I had to
use a regular plant pot that I cut holes in so the roots of the plant would be able to grow...unfortunately thats how some mud from the pot murked up the water .. I've since removed the offending pot , but the water is still muddy and it's now been 2 days. "Gail Futoran" wrote in message ... "Nick-S" iwant2believe wrote in message ... is there an easier solution than removing most of the water ! thankyou :-) Will Barley Straw do the job ? How long has it been? Given time, the muddiness will probably go away. Barley straw is for algae not mud. How did you plant your plants? If you didn't put pea gravel on top of the planting soil, you'll keep getting muddy water. Gail |
#4
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IMHO there really is no need to cut any additional holes in a pot used
to put plants in. They wuill do just fine with regular nursery pots.. If your afraid of dirt etc eventually filtering out of the pots, just put in some fiber filter batting before you put n the dirt. It will clear, just give it some time. Its not going to be the first time either, as its inevitable your gonna have potted plants get tipped be it form wht eind or critters its gonna happen.. On Mon, 13 Jun 2005 08:04:17 -0600, "Nick-S" iwant2believe wrote: ===I ran out of pea gravel and just used a few large stones - - also I had to ===use a regular plant pot that I cut holes in so the roots of the plant would ===be able to grow...unfortunately thats how some mud from the pot murked up ===the water .. I've since removed the offending pot , but the water is still ===muddy and it's now been 2 days. === ==="Gail Futoran" wrote in message ... === "Nick-S" iwant2believe wrote in message === ... === is there an easier solution than removing most of the water ! thankyou === :-) Will Barley Straw do the job ? === === How long has it been? Given time, the muddiness will === probably go away. Barley straw is for algae not mud. === === How did you plant your plants? If you didn't put === pea gravel on top of the planting soil, you'll keep === getting muddy water. === === Gail === === ============================================== Put some color in your cheeks...garden naked! "The original frugal ponder" ~~~~ }((((o ~~~~~~ }{{{{o ~~~~~~~ }(((((o |
#5
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"Nick-S" iwant2believe wrote in message ... is there an easier solution than removing most of the water ! thankyou :-) Will Barley Straw do the job ? ============================= Eventually it settles. Give it time. I line all my nursery plant pots with black plastic from trash bags and poke a few small holes in the bottom. It sure helps to keep the soil in the pot. Also use gravel over the soil or it'll soon be all over your pond. -- McKoi.... the frugal ponder... EVERYONE: "Please check people's headers for forgeries before flushing." NAMES ARE BEING FORGED. Do not feed the trolls. ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
#6
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thanks for your help
"Koi-Phonics" wrote in message ... "Nick-S" iwant2believe wrote in message ... is there an easier solution than removing most of the water ! thankyou :-) Will Barley Straw do the job ? ============================= Eventually it settles. Give it time. I line all my nursery plant pots with black plastic from trash bags and poke a few small holes in the bottom. It sure helps to keep the soil in the pot. Also use gravel over the soil or it'll soon be all over your pond. -- McKoi.... the frugal ponder... EVERYONE: "Please check people's headers for forgeries before flushing." NAMES ARE BEING FORGED. Do not feed the trolls. ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
#7
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When planting new plants in a pot. I line the pot, perforated or not, with
landscape "cloth". The fiber glass kind. Then pack the plant with purchased "topsoil" which is almost always clay. My Koi turn anything over, they can. I usually place the new pot in a MUCH larger one and fill the space inbetween with 1" pebbles. Martin "Nick-S" iwant2believe wrote in message ... is there an easier solution than removing most of the water ! thankyou :-) Will Barley Straw do the job ? |
#8
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On Tue, 14 Jun 2005 00:01:36 GMT, "Quercus Robur" wrote:
When planting new plants in a pot. I line the pot, perforated or not, with landscape "cloth". The fiber glass kind. Then pack the plant with purchased "topsoil" which is almost always clay. My Koi turn anything over, they can. I usually place the new pot in a MUCH larger one and fill the space inbetween with 1" pebbles. Martin Interesting, placing pot in pot. :-) Like Martin I line pot/basket with cheap weed fabric (I usually use plastic baskets from Big Lots ~ 12"X18"). I then make strips out of the fabric and lay on top of my "straight from the garden" sandy soil and large rocks on the strips to hold them down. Hardly any of the soil escapes when I put the plant in the pond, and none after. The nice thing is the weed fabric allows some water movement thru as I don't get the stinky sulfur smell when I divide those plants like I do from those in solid pots. ~ jan See my ponds and filter design: www.jjspond.us ~Keep 'em Wet!~ Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
#9
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"Quercus Robur" wrote in message ... When planting new plants in a pot. I line the pot, perforated or not, with landscape "cloth". The fiber glass kind. ===================== You may want to check with your vet about that fiber glass in you pond. Once swallowed it's like microscopic needles and can't be passed. It doesn't break down in the GI tract. I personally wouldn't use something like that where my fish would possibly have access to the glass fibers. -- McKoi.... the frugal ponder... EVERYONE: "Please check people's headers for forgeries before flushing." NAMES ARE BEING FORGED. Do not feed the trolls. ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
#10
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On Mon, 13 Jun 2005 08:04:17 -0600, "Nick-S" iwant2believe wrote:
I ran out of pea gravel and just used a few large stones - - also I had to use a regular plant pot that I cut holes in so the roots of the plant would be able to grow...unfortunately thats how some mud from the pot murked up the water .. I've since removed the offending pot , but the water is still muddy and it's now been 2 days. Aluminum Sulfate 4 oz per 1500 gal. It's 20 ppm, which is the dose recommended by the USDA. Reduces KH removes, phosphates causes particles to coagulate. That is a temporary treatment for algae, but it causes particles to coagulate and makes them easier to vacuum from the bottom. Koi and goldfish are bottom feeders that suck up a bit of bottom dirt/mud and if there is no food in it they blow it back out. They are most efficient in dispersing a pot of soil and small pebbles around the bottom of a once clean pond. I use larger than egg sized stones in my lily pots and don't make holes in the pots. Regards, Hal |
#11
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"Hal" wrote in message ... Koi and goldfish are bottom feeders that suck up a bit of bottom dirt/mud and if there is no food in it they blow it back out. They are most efficient in dispersing a pot of soil and small pebbles around the bottom of a once clean pond. I use larger than egg sized stones in my lily pots and don't make holes in the pots. ========================= Before someone asks.... these stones can be found at Lowe's and Home Depot. -- McKoi.... the frugal ponder... EVERYONE: "Please check people's headers for forgeries before flushing." NAMES ARE BEING FORGED. Do not feed the trolls. ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
#12
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some water movement thru as I don't get the stinky sulfur smell when I divide those plants like I do from those in solid pots. ~ jan Well, I'd go with that technique then! The sulfur smell usually also means hydrogen sulfide, which is toxic to fish. Probably well contained in the pot. But. Well, never too safe to be sorry as they say. C// |
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