Clean Inflow Ensures a Sparkling Pond

When operating properly, a pond will have good water volume and adequate exchange, or overflow, to ensure against stagnation. When the inflow goes awry, a pond will have either too much water or too little, and become dark.  Suddenly you find yourself constantly cleaning a muddy yard and the pond smells.

 

The most common problem with water inflow is lack of sufficient water to sustain pond level. Sometimes, heat or drought causes this problem. Most of the time though it is because the pond was not built so that it was level in the first place. Leaking can also be caused by cracks in the outdoor ponds concrete walls and plastic liners.

 

Since it’s easier to add water than to unearth, resituate and then repair a leaky basin, finding a solution for a pond that seems to have low water level usually begins with looking for a way to supply a supplementary water source. Even if the pond does leak, a fresh source of water may help the pond look cleaner.

 

However, before you consider adding a supplementary water source your best course of action is to make sure that your existing inflow pipes are not just clogged or cut off.  They get clogged with silt or debris.  Evidence that this is the culprit is soaked water or a wet patch around the surface edges of the ground.

 

Your inflow pipes can also crack or burst if they freeze during the winter. A pipe buried below frost line will run in cold weather, as long as the pickup source doesn’t dry up or freeze.  This is why most landscape architecture technologists recommend using PVC pipe. It does not tend to expand or contract like copper piping or crack like certain types of plastic pipes.

 

You can save yourself a lot of maintenance in general by making sure that your inflow pipes have a direct path to the pond. The less elbows, twists and dips that the water has to flow through, the less likely it is to become clogged.

 

If the problem is silt, you might try building a small silt basin (dug into the pool) just upstream of the pond to catch silt before it reaches the pond. This pocket can be cleaned out as needed, by hand or machine, without disturbing the pond.

 

If no supplementary stream or well is available, pond owners sometimes cut drainage ditches in the watershed above the pond. The ditches are usually filled with stone over perforated plastic pipe.

 

If your pond is located in a wet damp hollow you may have not choice to relocate it. You also may have built your pond just below some kind of watershed, which also might be cascading toxins from the earth into your pond as well. This can definitely result in the loss of your precious koi. Depending how much of the flooding in your pond s caused by seepage beneath the your only choice in this situation might be to relocate the pond!

U.V. Light Cleaners for Koi and Other Ponds

One of the most contemporary products for a Koi pond is the ultra-violet (U.V.) sterilizer. A U/V light easily kills planktonic algae (or pea soup as most pond keepers usually call it). U.V. light bulbs look like fluorescent light bulbs. Ultra-violet disinfecting has been used for many years in hospitals and in water purification and it also cleans up ponds and aquariums.

 

As effective as U.V. lights are for killing algae they will not clean up everything. However an ultraviolet light will not kill disease pathogens or parasites such as the Aeromonas bacteria. Essentially, the parasites can grow faster than the U/V light can kill them. Many fish owners use a combination of chemical and U/V light therapy to keep their ponds clean.

 

Pea soup algae on the other hand are light sensitive and are controlled with ultraviolet light treatment. However, the U/V will have a minimal impact on the growth of stringy algae attached to the pond walls.

 

A U.V. unit is not meant to replace a bio-filter. You still need a bio-filter for removing the ammonia wastes. You should not expect the U.V. unit to sterilize your pond. There will be bacteria on and in your fish, in the biological filter bed, and on the walls and bottom of the pond. What you can expect is to control harmful bacteria, algae, and other waterborne microorganisms by reducing their numbers.

 

Before selecting a U.V. light sterilizer for your fish pond you need to keep some factors in mind. First off make sure that the U.V. lamps can be immersed in water as they are much more efficient than the model of U.Vl lamp that is suspended over the water.  The unit must also be surrounded in a quartz glass sleeve and the bulb should operate in colder water without shattering.  A high quality bulb will have a life of 7,000 waters.  To be sure of the water quality the bulb should be changed at least one a year.

 

One drawback is that U.V. sterilizers can be expensive. Usually a normal sterilizer unit looks like a 3 inch white PVC pipe with inlet/outlet connections on the side at each end and a U.V. tube running through the center. The ends of the tube (U.V. bulb) will be sealed with o-rings and the wiring connections covered with rubber boots.  If the unit is cheap it might be poorly designed or meant for an aquarium and not a koi pond!