Shop Products
Houzz Logo Print
ella5_gw

Bog & size: Do I Do, or do I Don't

Ella5
13 years ago

zone 4 Tucson, AZ Sonoran Desert

One site says

Bog: ... basically a basin ...equal to 5-10% of the pond volume. ...

Volume calculator MY POOL HOLDS ABOUT 30000 GALLONS

Bog filter to hold 5-10% of the pond volume --about 3000 gallons at once

Based on that, I need A ledge 12" deep and as wide and long as it needs to be

Bog Tank length 80'

Bog Tank width 5'

Bog Side water depth 1'

Cubic feet 400 = 14.8148 cubic yds of 3/8" gravel

Gallons 2988

Based on the abaove formula, I am assuming the bog filter for my 30'x 20' pool will be about 80�x5�x1�

OR////// Bog garden linked to pond should be no more than 10 to 15% of the total surface area of pond. http://tucsonwatergardeners.tripod.com/Bog.html

A=l x w 30 x 20 = 600 sqft

10% of 600=60 sq�. 15% of 600=90sq�

or 90 sq feet:

A ledge 12" deep and as wide and long as it needs to be

Bog Tank length 45�

Bog Tank width 2

Bog Side water depth 1

Cubic feet 90 = cubic yds of 3/8" pea gravel

Gallons 672.3 gallons

On THIS formula, the bog would be 45 feet long, 2 feeet wide. That's a huge difference.

Both of these can't be correct.

HOWEVER, I�m reading that if there are No fish, there's NO NEED to filter the water. That may be true is some areas/states. Is it true in Tucson? Thread name Pond stinks

Is my math correct?

Do I do a bog or not, and which size is correct, if I need to?

It would be wonderful if I could build it as I can, rather than having to feed this pool chlorine for several more months before transforming it to chemical free. What do you all think?

Ella

Comments (5)

  • corrie22
    13 years ago

    Ella, the purpose of a bog garden/filter is to have some place where nutrients in the water can settle, and to have plants that use those nutrients as fertilizer.

    That's a great idea for people that have a lot of fish in their pond that would eat or uproot or otherwise mess up the plants so they can't establish plants in the pond.

    If you don't have too many fish in your pond, grow the plants in the pond, you don't need to create a separate place to grow the plants.

    I don't like bog gardens at all.
    It's one more thing I have to take care of, requires a pump and plumbing that has to be maintained and can break, and bog gardens can go bad too. If they do, all that mess is pumped back into the pond.

    Almost all submerged aquatic plants inhibit algae. If they didn't, they would be covered in algae themselves and die. I use hornwort in my pond because it does that very well, and also is easy for me to grow.

    If I were you, I would work on having a balanced pond and not try to use something like a bog garden that can also break.

    Corrie

  • mike_il
    13 years ago

    Ella,
    I am not crazy about using a pond for swimming. First I question how save it is. If you want to swim in your pool keep it as a swimming pool. That being said let me give you a link to a site on bog filtration. http://www.bogfiltration.com/.
    Mike

  • Ella5
    Original Author
    13 years ago

    Zone 4 Tucson, AZ Sonoran Desert, 2500' elevation
    Corrie, I REALLY like your thinking. I REALLY want to do that, I'm somewhat afraid of it. I don't want to end up with a pond full of a bulging, heaving, mass of green monster, either. How often do you need to remove baskets full of it, and what do you do with it?
    And, where is the beauty of submerged, or even floating non blooming plants? I might as well fill it in with dirt. Help me out here.
    Okay, I've read about hornwort, I'll get some. That may be the first plant I put into the pool. No duckweed, though.
    My pool is too deep (3 to 8 feet) for even lilies, which, as I said, I thought were floaters, not rooted in dirt.
    What can I use instead of, that hang their roots just in the water?
    And why can't I do that with water lilys? These expensive floating gardens support land plants without dirt, in the ponds, and their bare roots are sucking up water...

    I DO know I can't do everything at once, or even much at once. If I start out with hornwort to keep it clean, how much work is there to controlling that stuff? I don't want to solvle one problem and make others.

    And doesn't that stuff get caught in the filter? Don't you have to keep the water moving, at least some movement? I don't want stagnant, stinky polluted nasty water.

    Mike, No, I do not PLAN to use it for swimming, but I might, so I will test it at times. And if it's clean enough, might have dogs in it on occassion.
    I may put some edible fish in it. Doesn't the water need movement for them? Do I need mosquito eaters? And then bigger fish to help control them? Or, are they edible? Deep fried and chocolate covered?

    Ella

    Thanks for your responses.

  • corrie22
    13 years ago

    Ella, it's a perfect time for you to be thinking and planing this.

    I clean the pond out once a year, every spring. I take about 1/2 the water out when I vacuum it. Then the water level is low enough that I can get to all the water lilies.
    I use a laundry basket to get the hornwort out. Fill it up and dump it in the garden. I take about 3/4ths of it out every spring.

    The beauty is in the water lilies.

    I don't use any filters or pumps, that would defeat the purpose. Like I told you, I just have one small air pump.

    Corrie

  • sleeplessinftwayne
    13 years ago

    There is a Bog forum on Gardenweb although I admit I haven't gone there in a long while since Fred is no longer posting there. Fred got fed up with some of the other posters who did things incorrectly and then complained when things didn't go as they expected or criticized his methods. He went to a site where you have to pay membership.

    There was also a post both on this forum and bogs about a type of bog filter specifically for ponds that was pretty good. I'll see if I can locate them for you but it has been quite some time.

    Here is a link that might be useful: Freds bogs