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A couple of my pond fish
Posted: Sat Sep 25, 2010 4:55 am
by Mad Duff
I was having a clear out last week and sorted a few fish out to move to my Dad's pond and I took the oppertunity to get a couple of pics.
This is an Ide (natural form of orfe) I have had the fish for around 9 years now and it went into the pond around 2" long:
This is one of my big carp, it has changed a lot since it was introduced to my father in laws pond 10 years ago at 4", it was then moved to my pond 3 years ago at about 10" and this is her now:
It took a couple of attempts to get the photo of the carp, mainly because I was absolutely soaked from head to toe

Posted: Sat Sep 25, 2010 8:39 am
by Jim Powers
Nice fish!

Posted: Sat Sep 25, 2010 8:44 am
by clint
Cool fish, how big is the pond? Man made or natural?
Posted: Sat Sep 25, 2010 8:50 am
by Mad Duff
Posted: Sat Sep 25, 2010 9:06 am
by clint
WOW, really nice setup you have there. I must say i like all the Buddha statues and the Fu dogs/dragon are cool as well.
Posted: Sat Sep 25, 2010 10:15 am
by starsplitter7
Absolutely fantastic! I always love looking at your pond pictures. And your sturgeon are great. Fantastic looking fish.
Our Aquarium club had an amazing presentation from a Koi Farmer, and then they had had a Koi Growout contest. It was amazing. Wisps of fish that grew to 2-4 inches in 4 months. Wowsers!
Posted: Sat Sep 25, 2010 7:50 pm
by Jim Powers
Looks like a nice place to sit in the evening with a cold one.
Love the sturgeon!
Posted: Sun Sep 26, 2010 4:51 am
by mark joshi2
I always love looking at your pond pictures. And your sturgeon are great. Fantastic looking fish.Our Aquarium club had an amazing presentation from a Koi Farmer, and then they had had a Koi Growout contest. It was amazing. Wisps of fish that grew to 2-4 inches in 4 months. Wowsers!
Posted: Sun Sep 26, 2010 6:42 am
by piggy4
Love the pics Mark

Posted: Sun Sep 26, 2010 12:56 pm
by Oldfish
Mad Duff wrote:
The pond is just over 6000 gallon
How deep is it? Do you heat it any?
Posted: Sun Sep 26, 2010 1:42 pm
by Mad Duff
Oldfish wrote:
How deep is it? Do you heat it any?
It is 6 feet deep along the back edge sloping down to 7 feet deep along the front edge, no heating, I do have to large air pumps that run all year round, these are metal bodied and get quite warm and in turn do pump warm air into the pond.
Posted: Sun Sep 26, 2010 10:37 pm
by glenna
Your set up is VERY lovely!!!
I hope to someday have something as nice! Do you sit out there often?
Not knowing a lot about where you live.... does it get very cold in the Winter?
Do you have a heater out in the pond????
I am obviously thinking about adding a deep pond (4 feet ) in the back yard, but have no place INSIDE to save fishies should I be unprepared, so I am hearing what others are doing FIRST. I would like to keep koi. I live in the mid South US, so garden zone (USDA Hardiness) 7A which only gets below zero occasionally, but this does occur, from time to time (one time x 2 nights last year, if I remember....I HATE the cold

I think if I get it deep enough, and keep a spot thawed on the surface, I (they!!!....I will be warm and cozy in the house!!!) should be okay to survive the Winter, but not really sure.
The picutres are great, THanks!
Posted: Mon Sep 27, 2010 12:19 pm
by Mad Duff
glenna wrote:Your set up is VERY lovely!!!
I hope to someday have something as nice! Do you sit out there often?
Not knowing a lot about where you live.... does it get very cold in the Winter?
Do you have a heater out in the pond????
I am obviously thinking about adding a deep pond (4 feet ) in the back yard, but have no place INSIDE to save fishies should I be unprepared, so I am hearing what others are doing FIRST. I would like to keep koi. I live in the mid South US, so garden zone (USDA Hardiness) 7A which only gets below zero occasionally, but this does occur, from time to time (one time x 2 nights last year, if I remember....I HATE the cold

I think if I get it deep enough, and keep a spot thawed on the surface, I (they!!!....I will be warm and cozy in the house!!!) should be okay to survive the Winter, but not really sure.
The picutres are great, THanks!
Thank you Glenna, yeah I do like to chill out with a beer occasionally by the pond

, it is also nice hand feeding the koi which I can spend quite a while doing.
No heaters even in the winter, we get pretty cold winters and will get temps down to and below zero quite regularly, Some people switch over to smaller pumps over the winter but I leave everyhing running, pumps, filters, Uv's and air pump and between the air pump and uv's they do put some heat into the water but not that much.
It does make a big difference having the roof over the pond because then no freezing rain or snow are going in, with the pumps running the pond never freezes.
The deeper you can go the better, even if similar to mine it is dug down and then raised up from the ground. You can get polythene tents like polytunnels to go over the pond in the winter and these do help hold heat in around the pond.