A pond filter circulates healthy bacteria into a pond. The bacteria change ammonia left in the pond into nitrate. Ammonia is caused by decaying fecal matter, left over food and alternative organic substances. Healthy bacteria are poured into the pond as the water is pumped thru the filter. Cleaning of the filter must be done on a restricted basis as it disrupts the natural plus necessary bacterial growth in the pond.
Monitor filters to detect if cleaning is necessary. Clean the pond filter purely when an obstruction of water flow is occurring. Several times the filter can need to be cleaned when the winter months are over. Cleaning the filter in the early spring gives the natural bacteria enough time to repopulate. A fall cleaning might be needed if leaves and different matter fall into the pond, releasing harmful substances plus filling the pond with debris. The older a pond’s water filter becomes, the more natural and healthy bacteria are released into the pond. Take away the filter plus place into a bucket of pond water. Don’t use tap water. Faucet water contains chlorine which can kill the natural bacteria. Disassemble the filter plus find the obstruction. Only clean the areas which are preventing water flow. Using a tiny brush, look for algae and different material and remove. Replace any worn out or shredded pieces of the filter. Pads plus sponges should return to original color when rinsed, if it doesn’t, replace. Reassemble the filter and test. Make certain no leaks or blockages are occurring. Check the pond water and replace any bacteria that might are lost with bacterial additives found at pet or pond supply shops.
Pond skimmers are like pool skimmers in how they operate. A pond skimmer is placed in the ground right at the edge of your pond, above the line of water. The rubber pond liner is sealed on to the front of the box along with a clamp. Once water flows from the pond, it goes to the opening of the skimmer thru a door which tilts. This keeps out any larger debris, while filtering out smaller debris and trash. The debris gets pushed thru a leaf net and through a filter into a submersible pump, that is at the rear of the box.
Water then flows out of the pump through a discharge assembly into a piece of pipe that is bendable plus into the ground to a different filter or even a waterfall mechanism. The door that tilts is known as a weir and is specially made to make all of the water flow to the very top of the door. This allows for the most advantageous skimming action possible. The door may be closed so which it can be cleaned, and the filters can be taken off for rinsing plus replacing.
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