Watermeal / Duckweed Extraction Removal DIY - Part 1 Week 1

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  • Опубликовано: 27 авг 2024
  • Materials needed:
    Water Pump(predator 212cc semi trash)
    Bucket
    6 ft 2” PVC pipe
    Bucket
    PVC elbow
    32” Filtering sock(50 micron)
    Ladder
    2x4 wood and 2x6 boards
    2” rubber connectors(2x)
    Baby pool
    Toole Netting

Комментарии • 20

  • @LaughingRandomly
    @LaughingRandomly Год назад +1

    It probably got in there from birds/ducks. Sometimes it stays on birds body as they check out bodies of water. Similar to how a lawn care business mower will transfer weed seeds stuck under the mower from one property to another. 😉😎
    Also, you can look into getting some sterile carp in your pond, they love eating duckweed, and they don't reproduce.

  • @perkinshomestead
    @perkinshomestead 2 года назад +1

    We tried this last year too. We are setting up a pond aerator. We need to get oxygen in the bottom of the pond!

    • @mateo-6965
      @mateo-6965 2 года назад

      We have a big eration system with 4 stone diffusers on just a .3 acre and this frickin duckweed is still multiplying like crazy so don't think it will completely solve this issue. I will post a video on my channel, check it out..

  • @MidwestWoodsandWater
    @MidwestWoodsandWater 2 года назад

    My pond is in the same boat. I’ve made a couple videos about it. We just installed an aeration system. I’m thinking of using chemicals next spring to help put a stop to the watermeal/duckweed. It’s a pain in the butt.

    • @cwulfoutdoors318
      @cwulfoutdoors318  2 года назад +1

      2 things that worked wonders for mine. Herbicide and dye/bacteria. That combination has gotten it much more manageable. Good luck to you and I’ll check out your situation and progress.

    • @MidwestWoodsandWater
      @MidwestWoodsandWater 2 года назад

      @@cwulfoutdoors318 can I ask what herbicide you went with? I’m probably going to start treating in the spring since it will be dying off here soon.

    • @cwulfoutdoors318
      @cwulfoutdoors318  2 года назад +1

      First started with Diquat then went with Flumigard. Diquat kills faster but Flumigard kills longer. Both work well

    • @MidwestWoodsandWater
      @MidwestWoodsandWater 2 года назад

      @@cwulfoutdoors318 I’ll check those out! Thanks!

    • @cwulfoutdoors318
      @cwulfoutdoors318  2 года назад

      Anytime

  • @zekethefishgeek8690
    @zekethefishgeek8690 2 года назад +1

    It is a symptom of a pond that is stagnant and in dire need of drained and cleaned out... then you need some water movement to keep it destratified... the bottom needs to be limed with pulverized limestone, and an aeration system with a few bottom diffuser's and / or mucked out with heavy equipment or a dredge.
    Other than that.. you're not going to win. It is a symptom and it's CAUSE needs fixed then the symptoms will go away... Do not waste time and money on the pond because you're only fighting Mother Nature that is trying to make land out of your pond... dig it out or dredge it out.. or let it go to turn in to a swamp, then bog, then wetlands, then woods... you can't win unless you get the dead organics that are causing the tannins in the water to lower the total alkalinity of your pond. Lime counters tannins... think about looking at it like it's either a swamp OR a quarry pond / lake, that's what you are dealing with on the alkalinity levels with the water at either end of the spectrum. If you test it, I bet you're gonna get a total alkalinity of WAY less than 20ppm... it needs to be like 50 bare minimum up all the way to or more than 200ppm. The leaves, grass, and other dead stuff that was once living is causing the low alkalinity when it is in the water leaching out the tannic acids when they lay on the bottom with no oxygen to let it rot and no water movement to let the gasses escape into the atmosphere... how's that for a fix.
    Fix it or don't ... but fighting it is ABSOLUTELY 💯 FUTILITY without some type of water alkalinity shift to a MUCH HIGHER LEVEL...

    • @cwulfoutdoors318
      @cwulfoutdoors318  2 года назад

      Yes zeke you are correct about everything that you said. Right now we are in the process of getting the water quality right and all the sludge off the bottom using bacteria.

  • @daisyslittlemiracle7171
    @daisyslittlemiracle7171 Год назад +1

    I was trying to watch this but gave me bad motion sickness. Sorry but you move too much .

  • @aarronconkright999
    @aarronconkright999 3 года назад

    My pond has had this for years and we didn’t know it was watermeal. We actually killed a lot of our fish from so many chemicals we tried. Our pond is only about a half acre. I was just wondering if it grows back every year even after you skim it all off?

    • @cwulfoutdoors318
      @cwulfoutdoors318  3 года назад

      Aarron Conkright thanks for the question. Actually the skimming wouldn’t get it all off the surface, just thins it out. In the winter when we’re getting more rain the level gets high enough for the outflow pipes to get rid of a lot. So it clears up a lot. But yeah in the summer months it takes over. When the water gets cold it goes dormant at the bottom of the pond waiting for warmer spring temps. Hope this helped.

    • @Apfelloch
      @Apfelloch 3 года назад +1

      We've been hand-skimming our pond (about 1/3 the size of the one in this video) with a net for 7 years now and the duckweed will always come back. In general we don't have a problem with it, but from May to July it's growing exponentially fast and will cover the whole pond in a week, if we do nothing about it and the sun is shining. Although it's kind of a nice and relaxing outdoor activity to skim by hand for 20-30 minutes per day, I'm still thinking about building something like shown in this video because I'm lazy.

    • @zekethefishgeek8690
      @zekethefishgeek8690 2 года назад

      Read my reply...

  • @Earth11111
    @Earth11111 3 года назад

    To slow imo