I would move the skimmer closer to the edge so that you can reach the basket when you need to clean it. It looks hard to reach in the video. Coming along nicely.
I realize I’m likely too late with this comment but I’m catching up with your channel. I think I’d use a rea lively flat, smooth flagstone on the ledge in front of the viewing window so you can actually it right there. Maybe add a second row of blocks in front for depth of the bench.
@@patrisiaszatmari2122 I don’t! That’s the good thing about this system. Even if a section clogs, it will just divert the flow to the rest of it. Then as the bacteria break everything down it’ll get sucked through and open back up. There’s never a layer that just sits and rots, there’s always flow
Unless you live in like CA or somewhere like that with drought period, then it's not that bad lmao That pond appears to hold roughly 1800 gallons which is roughly 4 days of water use... so not terribly expensive, especially considering people who have sprinkler systems use *_many times_* that amount of water on a repeated basis just to maintain their green deserts‼️
Love this greenhouse series👍😃
Thanks! Glad you like it
I would move the skimmer closer to the edge so that you can reach the basket when you need to clean it. It looks hard to reach in the video. Coming along nicely.
I realize I’m likely too late with this comment but I’m catching up with your channel. I think I’d use a rea lively flat, smooth flagstone on the ledge in front of the viewing window so you can actually it right there. Maybe add a second row of blocks in front for depth of the bench.
Whats the brand of thebsealant
Atlantic RTV silicone
Undergravel filter in the pond ?
Yep!
@@ALifeExotic so often overlooked type of filtration but it works so well. Do u have it on reverse flow or normal?
@@patrisiaszatmari2122 it’s a suction grid, so sucks water in then goes through the other forms of filtration
@@ALifeExotic 👍🏻 how do you go about cleaning the gravel on the bottom? Guessing it will start to get abit clogged eventually
@@patrisiaszatmari2122 I don’t! That’s the good thing about this system. Even if a section clogs, it will just divert the flow to the rest of it. Then as the bacteria break everything down it’ll get sucked through and open back up. There’s never a layer that just sits and rots, there’s always flow
Water is obviously cheap where you live.
Unless you live in like CA or somewhere like that with drought period, then it's not that bad lmao
That pond appears to hold roughly 1800 gallons which is roughly 4 days of water use... so not terribly expensive, especially considering people who have sprinkler systems use *_many times_* that amount of water on a repeated basis just to maintain their green deserts‼️