We inherited a medium sized pond when we bought the house about 5 years ago. No fish but we put our daughter's two goldfish into it and now we have over 50 fish! All have survived and indeed thrived even though we never feed them, but we'd not used a filter and so the water was getting a bit murky.
We netted the pond in autumn to stop the majority of the leaves from falling into it, and this summer we treated ourselves and the fish to a filtration system. The water is much much clearer already although we have to clean the pump daily at the moment.
The question is, the bottom of the pond is still a mass of decaying vegetation and I imagine 5/6 years of fish poo. If we scoop it up the water is full of suspended silt for several hours. How and when would be the best time to get in there and scoop it all up in one go? The fish are displaying signs of definite mating behaviour at the moment and I don't want to disturb their eggs if they are down there, nor cause them too much distress.
Thanks so much, we're real novices at this pond thing.
We netted the pond in autumn to stop the majority of the leaves from falling into it, and this summer we treated ourselves and the fish to a filtration system. The water is much much clearer already although we have to clean the pump daily at the moment.
The question is, the bottom of the pond is still a mass of decaying vegetation and I imagine 5/6 years of fish poo. If we scoop it up the water is full of suspended silt for several hours. How and when would be the best time to get in there and scoop it all up in one go? The fish are displaying signs of definite mating behaviour at the moment and I don't want to disturb their eggs if they are down there, nor cause them too much distress.
Thanks so much, we're real novices at this pond thing.
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