I have three ponds and I saw that I was getting duck weed as well, I bought sterile carp four or five of them per Acre of pond. It has helped immensely.
The pond exhibits an excess of nitrogen, evident through two indicators: the proliferation of duckweed within the pond and the presence of vibrant, waist-high green grass along the pond's banks. This surplus nitrogen originates from the surface soil surrounding the pond, entering the water through runoff from rainfall. The elevated nitrogen levels result from the application of fertilizer, leading to the proliferation of duckweed in the pond.
By far the best way to stop duckweed that I've seen is to just dye the pond. My father-in-law's pond was thick with the stuff and he dyed it blue and the duckweed is gone. Doesn't hurt the fish and it's still safe to drink and swim and stuff because most dyes are supposed to be food grade but it makes it so that the less light reaches down in so that if duckweed grows it can only grow in the shallows.
@@kCI251 everything is a chemical . You're a bunch of chemicals. Ooga booga. The dye for this comes in food grade that is safe for drinking water. Organic Pond™ pureBLUE Pond Dye is one such brand.
@@kCI251 everything is a chemical. You are made of chemicals. That's just a silly buzzword. All pond dyes are non toxic and some are even food grade dyes such as Organic Pond pureBLUE Pond Dye
I have three ponds and I saw that I was getting duck weed as well, I bought sterile carp four or five of them per Acre of pond. It has helped immensely.
The pond exhibits an excess of nitrogen, evident through two indicators: the proliferation of duckweed within the pond and the presence of vibrant, waist-high green grass along the pond's banks. This surplus nitrogen originates from the surface soil surrounding the pond, entering the water through runoff from rainfall.
The elevated nitrogen levels result from the application of fertilizer, leading to the proliferation of duckweed in the pond.
By far the best way to stop duckweed that I've seen is to just dye the pond. My father-in-law's pond was thick with the stuff and he dyed it blue and the duckweed is gone. Doesn't hurt the fish and it's still safe to drink and swim and stuff because most dyes are supposed to be food grade but it makes it so that the less light reaches down in so that if duckweed grows it can only grow in the shallows.
Stupidest solution I have ever heard, just put chemical dyes in the water, lol
@@kCI251 everything is a chemical . You're a bunch of chemicals. Ooga booga.
The dye for this comes in food grade that is safe for drinking water. Organic Pond™ pureBLUE Pond Dye
is one such brand.
@@kCI251 everything is a chemical. You are made of chemicals. That's just a silly buzzword. All pond dyes are non toxic and some are even food grade dyes such as Organic Pond pureBLUE Pond Dye
@kCI251 that's about the dumbest reply I ever heard. Inbreeding is disgusting.
You could have just pumped that water out.
Put tilapia in your pond, they eat duckweed and azola
your lucky it didnt wash away your tread lines
Too much FERTILIZER on your beautiful green lawn behind the pond! You keep feeding the aquatic plants every time you sprinkle your lawn!
Some people don't fertilize at all and still have this happen.
Petrochemical fertilizers aren't the only source of nitrogen there is.
I don’t fertilize at all. But it is a run off pond on a farm.