How To Keep The Water In Your Fish Pond In Good Condition

January 24, 2012  
Filed under Garden

When people who keep fish talk of how to keep your pond in good condition, they take it for granted that everybody understands that it is synonymous with how to keep the water in your fish pond in decent condition, because the water to fish is like air is to us and everything depends upon it. We cannot be healthy if we are breathing smut, smog and pollution and nor can fish.

So, if you keep the water decontaminated, the fish will be glad and probably breed and the plants will be happy and probably propagate and healthy plants will do their own bit to help keep the water decontaminated. However, you have to get the ball rolling, before others can help keep it rolling and your biggest job here is to get the pond’s water filtration system correct from the start.

You need to set up two types of filtration. The first is a simple mechanical filter that blocks algae, dead plants, leaves and faeces as the water is pumped through it and the second filter is a biological filter that mutates unseen waste from your pond.

This produces a nitrogen cycle and the danger here is that the nitrogen will change into ammonia which will kill your fish very quickly. A easy test is the clarity of the water. It ought to be clear enough for you to see the bottom easily and there ought to be no floating debris in there. No lumps of sticky weed or clogs of bubbling vegetation.

Overfeeding is a trap that lots of novice pond-owners fall into. You have to feed your fish high quality food, depending on what they are, but do not forget that they will get some wild, fresh meat as well. Insects will fall in and mosquitoes will attempt to breed in there and all will get consumed by your fish, so do not be alarmed if they do not seem to be eating much.

An surplus of shop-bought fish food will cause the water to go cloudy and algae to grow. If you would like to increase the proportion of wild game in their diet, put a small night light at the edge of the pool and see how many hundred insects fall into the water to become fish food.

Keep an eye on your plants as well as on your fish. If your plants are dying or rotting, take them out and ask an expert the likely cause. It may simply be that they are the wrong type of plants for your pond or it maybe more significant like the pH value of the water. These are concerns that are easily fixed, once you are aware of them.

The last thing to be certain of is aeration. Your pond water should contain oxygen just as our air should contain oxygen as well. This is also easily achieved. Buy a good pond pump with a filtered intake and two outlets: one for the mechanical filter and one for a fountain. The water falling back to the pond will become rich in oxygen and you should not have any concerns about the quality of the water in your fish pond.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on many subjects, but is now involved with water garden pumps. If you are interested in a Solar Powered Pond Pump, please go to our web site now for a special deal.

Comments

Feel free to leave a comment...
and oh, if you want a pic to show with your comment, go get a gravatar!

You must be logged in to post a comment.