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Hey folks, anyone got any great and inexpensive ideas on lowering the ph in my pond. As I have said in the past our tap water is very high in PH. I just tested my pond again and it is still in the 9.0 area. In the past I have bought some PH lowering acid, but it is very expensive and with about 4000 gallons it won't be cheap to keep it in range. I have tried adding some spagnum peat moss to help lower it over time, but it just isn't working. I am getting nutrient lockout for sure. A lot of my leaves are pale yellow and surely aren't getting enough iron. I need a reasonably priced fix if anyone has it!
Thanks
I have used pine needles, barley straw, and vinegar (cheap, but be very very careful), and all of them work. but now, with water dripping through the small pockets of peat in my towers, my pH stays naturally very low, even with slightly basic water- I lime on a regular basis.
Jeff Givan said:Hey folks, anyone got any great and inexpensive ideas on lowering the ph in my pond. As I have said in the past our tap water is very high in PH. I just tested my pond again and it is still in the 9.0 area. In the past I have bought some PH lowering acid, but it is very expensive and with about 4000 gallons it won't be cheap to keep it in range. I have tried adding some spagnum peat moss to help lower it over time, but it just isn't working. I am getting nutrient lockout for sure. A lot of my leaves are pale yellow and surely aren't getting enough iron. I need a reasonably priced fix if anyone has it!
Thanks
Hey folks, anyone got any great and inexpensive ideas on lowering the ph in my pond. As I have said in the past our tap water is very high in PH. I just tested my pond again and it is still in the 9.0 area. In the past I have bought some PH lowering acid, but it is very expensive and with about 4000 gallons it won't be cheap to keep it in range. I have tried adding some spagnum peat moss to help lower it over time, but it just isn't working. I am getting nutrient lockout for sure. A lot of my leaves are pale yellow and surely aren't getting enough iron. I need a reasonably priced fix if anyone has it!
Thanks
Doesn't the lime make the PH higher? What kind of peat moss do you use in your towers? And, how much? For 4000 gallons what would you suggest if I use vinegar. I also need to figure something out to keep it that way, because when I add water it will be high again. I suppose that I could treat the water before I add it too the pond, the only problem is that I lose a lot during this time of the year due to evaporation and some leakage so I would need to premix it in a large vessel before adding.
Nate Storey said:I have used pine needles, barley straw, and vinegar (cheap, but be very very careful), and all of them work. but now, with water dripping through the small pockets of peat in my towers, my pH stays naturally very low, even with slightly basic water- I lime on a regular basis.
Jeff Givan said:Hey folks, anyone got any great and inexpensive ideas on lowering the ph in my pond. As I have said in the past our tap water is very high in PH. I just tested my pond again and it is still in the 9.0 area. In the past I have bought some PH lowering acid, but it is very expensive and with about 4000 gallons it won't be cheap to keep it in range. I have tried adding some spagnum peat moss to help lower it over time, but it just isn't working. I am getting nutrient lockout for sure. A lot of my leaves are pale yellow and surely aren't getting enough iron. I need a reasonably priced fix if anyone has it!
Thanks
Yeah, lime raises my pH when my pH is too low (I usually lime when my system average hits 6.2 or lower to take the system up to the 6.5-6.7 range). I use regular old peat moss to start my plants and then incorporate everything into my towers- the process of water dripping throught the plant roots and moss causes my pH to stay pretty stable but pretty low (usually aroun 6.4 or 6.5) compared to the pH of the water i add. this means i have to lime to keep the pH where I want it. if you're going to use vinegar, what Earl said is very important- use it with caution. buy a nice handheld pH meter (i use Testr3 meters) and mix small batches (say 20 gallons if you have a 200 gallon system) to the desired pH and let it rest for a while. If you come back to it and it's still at the right pH, then you have a primative rubric for figuring out what your entire system will require. then take your vinegar and add it incrementally(say 10% total vinegar required every other day for 20 days) over several days (or until your pH is getting close), testing your pH the whole way. make sure you are going slow and testing because in my experience, your system biology may cause your system reaction to vinegar additions to be pretty variable. and this can be very tricky- so i caution you to maybe try other options before vinegar. . .
THIS IS IMPORTANT: make sure you aren't reacting to diurnal effects of algae- as an algal dieoff, or shading could completely destroy your system once you've acidified your water, and thier regular diurnal effects would make your pH swings even more extreme for your fish/plants. I would shade the system heavily for a week or two before I started worrying about adding vinegar, and while i was shading i'd throw a bale of barley straw into your tank underneath your inflow (rinse it good first). In one system I had, I had my pH swinging from 7 in the morning to 10 in the afternoon- 100% because of algae.
Jeff Givan said:Doesn't the lime make the PH higher? What kind of peat moss do you use in your towers? And, how much? For 4000 gallons what would you suggest if I use vinegar. I also need to figure something out to keep it that way, because when I add water it will be high again. I suppose that I could treat the water before I add it too the pond, the only problem is that I lose a lot during this time of the year due to evaporation and some leakage so I would need to premix it in a large vessel before adding.
Nate Storey said:I have used pine needles, barley straw, and vinegar (cheap, but be very very careful), and all of them work. but now, with water dripping through the small pockets of peat in my towers, my pH stays naturally very low, even with slightly basic water- I lime on a regular basis.
Jeff Givan said:Hey folks, anyone got any great and inexpensive ideas on lowering the ph in my pond. As I have said in the past our tap water is very high in PH. I just tested my pond again and it is still in the 9.0 area. In the past I have bought some PH lowering acid, but it is very expensive and with about 4000 gallons it won't be cheap to keep it in range. I have tried adding some spagnum peat moss to help lower it over time, but it just isn't working. I am getting nutrient lockout for sure. A lot of my leaves are pale yellow and surely aren't getting enough iron. I need a reasonably priced fix if anyone has it!
Thanks
Thanks for all your advice Earl and Nate! My system isn't buffered at all with any carbonate since our tap water is so high in PH. We pull our water out of either an aquafir or the American Channel which is a channel made of all concrete that brings water from the Colorado River depending on usage and time. If anything I need to constantly keep adding something to control the akalinity. I do have a bit of an algae bloom right now so I need to be sure and take an early morning test and then an afternoon test. The one I did this morning was around 10:30 am.
We are in the same boat, you and I- alkaline water with an algae bloom. Only difference for me is no sign of life in the GB. Let me know if you find a pH lowering agent that you like, and I'll do the same. I'm thinking I may have to seal the ferrocement pond in order to reduce the effect. I was hoping it would have lost it's blush of lime by now, but perhaps it never does...
Jeff Givan said:Thanks for all your advice Earl and Nate! My system isn't buffered at all with any carbonate since our tap water is so high in PH. We pull our water out of either an aquafir or the American Channel which is a channel made of all concrete that brings water from the Colorado River depending on usage and time. If anything I need to constantly keep adding something to control the akalinity. I do have a bit of an algae bloom right now so I need to be sure and take an early morning test and then an afternoon test. The one I did this morning was around 10:30 am.
if you are going to seal it look into used billboard tarps they work really well and it keeps them out of a landfill
Actually Jeff.. I'd say that your water is in fact highly "buffered"... with carbonates... the Colarado from memory.. and any aquifers... are drawing from limestone.... hence your pH of 9.0...Thanks for all your advice Earl and Nate! My system isn't buffered at all with any carbonate since our tap water is so high in PH. We pull our water out of either an aquafir or the American Channel which is a channel made of all concrete that brings water from the Colorado River depending on usage and time. If anything I need to constantly keep adding something to control the akalinity.
Jeff Givan said:Actually Jeff.. I'd say that your water is in fact highly "buffered"... with carbonates... the Colarado from memory.. and any aquifers... are drawing from limestone.... hence your pH of 9.0...Thanks for all your advice Earl and Nate! My system isn't buffered at all with any carbonate since our tap water is so high in PH. We pull our water out of either an aquafir or the American Channel which is a channel made of all concrete that brings water from the Colorado River depending on usage and time. If anything I need to constantly keep adding something to control the akalinity.
Alkalinity and hardness are often confused... your alkalinity is caused by "buffering".... and the "concrete" probably isn't helping...
And as TCL says... adding acid... isn't effective.... until ALL the carbonate buffer is used up... hence the lowering of pH, just to have it rebound...
Topping up with "buffered" source water just negates any addition of acid... adding acid to your top-up water will overtime have more effect... as essentially you are lowering the "buffering" capacity... rather than adding to it...
Dosing your tank and top-up water ... and the natural acidification due to nitrification... will, over time move your pH...
Shading your tank and dealing with your algael problem is a must do...
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