Posted by Tony M on May 30, 2004, 6:45 pm
I have a small pond which has a lot of fine sediment in it, and hasn't been
cleaned for years (as far as I know) - I have been advised that a pond
Vacuum will do the cleaning job - anyone know where I can hire one in the
South Bucks, West London area ?
Thanks
Posted by Sacha on May 30, 2004, 6:58 pm
On 30/5/04 11:45 pm, in article c9do5l$1o8$1@newsg3.svr.pol.co.uk, "Tony M"
> I have a small pond which has a lot of fine sediment in it, and hasn't been
> cleaned for years (as far as I know) - I have been advised that a pond
> Vacuum will do the cleaning job - anyone know where I can hire one in the
> South Bucks, West London area ?
>
I'm not a pond expert but is this a good idea? "Things" could be living in
that sediment, so a buckit and chuckit might be better. If you put the
chuckit on the side of the pond the 'things' can crawl back into it. Just a
thought. I'm also curious as to why you want to clean it out?
--
Sacha
(remove the weeds after garden to email me)
Posted by David W.E. Roberts on June 4, 2004, 6:35 am
> On 30/5/04 11:45 pm, in article c9do5l$1o8$1@newsg3.svr.pol.co.uk, "Tony
M"
> > I have a small pond which has a lot of fine sediment in it, and hasn't
been
> > cleaned for years (as far as I know) - I have been advised that a pond
> > Vacuum will do the cleaning job - anyone know where I can hire one in
the
> > South Bucks, West London area ?
> >
> I'm not a pond expert but is this a good idea? "Things" could be living
in
> that sediment, so a buckit and chuckit might be better. If you put the
> chuckit on the side of the pond the 'things' can crawl back into it. Just
a
> thought. I'm also curious as to why you want to clean it out?
I am considering removing some silt after about 7 years of pond.
Up until this year the pond cleared nicely each yeasr, and runnung the pump
didn't cloud it up.
This year, even though the pump is raised on bricks inside a container to
try and keep foreign objects out, the pump keeps silting up and the water is
generally cloudy.
So the pond probably needs the amount of silt reducing.
I was considering making a 'silt filter' by using the secondary feed from
the pump to circulate water through a sand filter in a tank, but I have no
idea how effective this would be - I may just bucket the silt out and let it
settle, then return as much water as possible and add the silt to the
compost heap.
If anyone has built an effective filter to remove silt, I would be
interested in the design :-)
Cheers
Dave R
Posted by martin on June 4, 2004, 6:59 am
On Fri, 4 Jun 2004 11:35:58 +0100, "David W.E. Roberts"
>I was considering making a 'silt filter' by using the secondary feed from
>the pump to circulate water through a sand filter in a tank, but I have no
>idea how effective this would be - I may just bucket the silt out and let it
>settle, then return as much water as possible and add the silt to the
>compost heap.
>If anyone has built an effective filter to remove silt, I would be
>interested in the design :-)
Years ago in another life I had a holiday job as a waterworks filter
bed attendant. Passing the water through a tank containing quite
course sand cleared the water.
Posted by tuin man on June 4, 2004, 3:35 pm
> If anyone has built an effective filter to remove silt, I would be
> interested in the design :-)
> Cheers
> Dave R
Hmm not sure if this is what you want, but I might have one. I'll have to
check the make/model later. Basically, its a pump that can handle
semi-solods. Silt, if dispersed throughout agitated water does get pumped.
But not the kind of stuff that is dense enough to need to be shovelled out.
Patrick
> cleaned for years (as far as I know) - I have been advised that a pond
> Vacuum will do the cleaning job - anyone know where I can hire one in the
> South Bucks, West London area ?
>