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2008
Blagdon Water Gardens
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FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Good Excuses to Get a Fountain and a Filter
Of course this is the time of the year that Aquatic retailers eagerly await the return of their early season customers who only bought a pool and a few plants. They return in their droves looking for submersible pumps for fountains, waterfalls and filters. As the weather warms up the new fish start gasping at the surface despite them following all the recommendations of getting in the right number of plants and especially oxygenators in the water.
Allow one bunch of oxygenators per 0.2 sq m (2 sqft) of pool surface
Allow one lily for every 2.3 sq m (25 sqft) of pool surface.
Marginals: allow at least one plant for every 0.5sq m (5 sqft).
First things first - oxygenators don't oxygenate at night. In fact they do the reverse. So if things are pretty traumatic already in the pool, a throttling backon the old oxygen supply is not going to be too beneficial.
But anyway in a new pool especially with Koi carp and even if it has a filter system, if the fish have been added before the whole system has matured, the pool has to go through a phase where the ammonia level rises before the bacteria that break down that ammonia get well established. Now it is a good idea to add one or two fish to start the whole process going because it is their faeces and fish food that produces the ammonia that the bacteria feed on, but these are 'Kamikaze' fish in the sense that the environment you have introduced them to is going to go through some pretty unhealthy phases before it gets robust enough to support a full population of fish at 2inches per square foot of surface area. The worst bit is when then the ammonia is partly broken down to nitrite chemicals and you have a cocktail that is poisonous and damaging to the gills of the fish. This is when they start gasping. So the best action is to follow your instincts and get plenty of oxygen in there. Large partial water changes are best, but running water in hard from a hose is also good. The oxygen in the water will sustain the fish and the bacteria in the bottom of the pool, or the filter if you have one, with the essential oxygen they need to make the chemical break down. The next phase is the break down of the nitrites to nitrates, which is then greedily absorbed by the plants.
So if you haven't got a fountain or a waterfall and you have some precious fish recently installed, think about getting one. And if you have created this watery habitat for the sake of some beloved fish, then seriously think about a biological pool filter, especially if it gets as warm as last year here in the UK. The other deciding factor maybe that without a filtration system, your pool needs to be two thirds covered by plants at this time of year in order to maintain a balance and provide anywhere near clear water. Allow 4 to 6 weeks for a pool to really establish it's microbiology. There are proprietary 'pool starter' mixes available to get things going more quickly, or you could try borrowing a couple of gallons of water from a friends pool that you have so long admired. Adding this will be like a yoghurt starter. Apparently spitting into the pool can have the same effect! The bacteria we carry in our mouths are pretty much the same as those found in the bottom of a pond!
Peter May

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