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06-17-2025, 07:16 AM
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#1
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Join Date: Oct 2015
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Clear water that allows sunlight to reach the bottom is a necessity for filamentous algae to grow. Dark water or water muddied from heavy rain runoff will kill it temporarily, but when it clears up again it will regrow.
I have fought it in my three ponds/lakes for a lifetime. Herbicides help for a few months but will never totally get rid of it. My grandad believed in fertilizing his pond with a special granular pond fertilizer to make the water dark. It would get so black in a few days after a fertilization that a paddle would disappear from sight in less than 12 inches depth. All algae would die and the water would be free of it for a month or so. When the water cleared back up the algae would come back.
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The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Stan Hillis For Your Post:
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06-18-2025, 04:26 PM
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#2
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Stan Hillis
Clear water that allows sunlight to reach the bottom is a necessity for filamentous algae to grow. Dark water or water muddied from heavy rain runoff will kill it temporarily, but when it clears up again it will regrow.
I have fought it in my three ponds/lakes for a lifetime. Herbicides help for a few months but will never totally get rid of it. My grandad believed in fertilizing his pond with a special granular pond fertilizer to make the water dark. It would get so black in a few days after a fertilization that a paddle would disappear from sight in less than 12 inches depth. All algae would die and the water would be free of it for a month or so. When the water cleared back up the algae would come back.
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Stan, sad thing is it worked and if your grandpap did that now the environazis would lock him up.
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The Following User Says Thank You to Mike Koneski For Your Post:
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