Showing posts with label many. Show all posts
Showing posts with label many. Show all posts

Saturday, April 14, 2018

New the Many Kinds of Patio Heaters

If you are shopping for a patio heater, there are several different options from which you can choose. Whatever heater you choose will provide warmth for your patio, which will let your family to use your porch for longer than you would be able.


The first option from which you can choose is the tabletop heater. This option is compact, portable, and typically more inexpensive. They are the perfect choice if you only need to heat a small circle of about six to seven feet.


Several tabletop heaters are created with bases, which have small fuel tanks, which hold the propane that is used to produce heat.


Another sort of patio heater is a transportable patio heater. These full-sized heaters do not include a fixed fuel line. They are portable to any place that you require heat, and can create a twenty-foot circle of heat.


One of the greatest traits of these heaters is their flexibility. They can be relocated to wherever you want heat at the time. These heaters are usually mounted on wheels, so you can roll it wherever you want it to go.


The bulk of these heaters are made with a section explicitly for their propane fuel tank. They can provide up to 40,000 BTU's of radiant heat, and they ordinarily feature adjustable thermostats that permit you to set the heat to whatever temperature is most comfortable for you.


If you are attempting to keep your terrace free of disorder, you should look into strip heaters, which mount on the ceiling or the wall. These heaters are meant to be permanently installed. You should especially consider this option if you have children or pets which could accidentally knock them over and injure themselves or damage your home.


If these options are not pleasing to you, you can always purchase an in-ground patio heater. This heater alternative is a permanent installation that creates power and stability. They characteristically have a much wider heating radius than the less expensive, mobile models, and tap into a pre-existing natural gas supply.


The majority of patio heaters use liquid propane as a fuel, but some use an established the natural gas source. Many options will come in two different models, and allow you to choose your fuel preference. Remember that models that use propane tanks require you to purchase the fuel separately.


There are many different options which you need to consider when you are looking to purchase a patio heater. It is important to think about what your family's needs are and how much your budget is. You also need to determine what kind of fuel you want to use, and if there is an established natural gas source available.


A patio heater is an excellent way to bring your family together and extend the amount of time that you can use your patio. By installing one of these heater options, you will provide warmth on your porch throughout the autumn, and make it usable when it would be too cold outside to sit on your patio without your heater.

Monday, March 26, 2018

New How Many Fish Can Your Garden Pond Take?

The maximum number of fish you can have in a pond depends on the volume of the water, the quality of the water, the size of the fish, the species of the fish, the climate of the area and the food available.


If the pond has no pump, filter or other equipment, in a warm climate, you shouldn't keep more than two 15 centimetre fish per cubic metre (two 6 inch fish per cubic yard). You can keep fish at much higher densities than this, but the chances of them remaining healthy are not good.


The better the water quality, the more fish you can keep. With the right technology, fish farms keep up to 200 kilograms of fish in a cubic metre of water (about six pounds of fish per cubic foot). However, as a rough guide, in a garden pond half a metre (one and a half feet) deep, constantly in the shade, with well-buffered water being pumped continuously through an ultra-violet clarifier (to prevent algae blooms) and a biological filter, you could keep up to nine goldfish of 15 centimetres (six inches) length per square metre of pond (i.e.135 centimetres of fish per square metre, or about 45 inches of fish per square yard). To be safe, keep less than half this number so that you have plenty of leeway in the event of the pump or UV failing. In a warm climate, if the pond is in the sun much of the day, reduce the number by half again - i.e. about 35 centimetres per square metre (14 inches per square yard).


Obviously, the larger the fish, the more it pollutes the water so the less the number you can have in the pond. Fish growth tends to be restricted by the size of the water body they live in. For example, goldfish can grow to more than 30 centimetres (12 inches) long, but in most average-sized ponds, they usually won't grow to more than 20 centimetres (8 inches).


Some species need more space than others and some species pollute the water more than others. For example, koi are twice as polluting as goldfish, probably because they stir up the pond bottom sediments more. Also, some species of fish are more tolerant of poor water quality than others. For example, koi can live in water that isn't pure enough for trout.


Climate affects fish activity because they are cold-blooded. Their metabolism doubles with every 10 degrees centigrade rise in temperature which means they eat twice as much and pollute the water twice as much. As a general rule, you can keep double the number of fish in water at 13 degrees centigrade as you can in water at 26 degrees centigrade.


Ideally, you should keep only as many fish in a pond as the food chain in the pond can support. The amount of natural food available will vary from pond to pond. Up to 30 centimetres per square metre (12 inches per square yard) of fish survive well in some ponds without being fed. So, keeping the fish numbers down means you don't have to spend the money or time to feed them. More importantly, by not feeding the fish you aren't adding nutrients to the pond which feed algae.