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  • May is Wildflower Month May 17, 2012
      May is underway, the month that is the bridge between Spring & Summer.  In the Santa Monica Mountains, it is a month of vibrant color.  The hillsides are bejeweled in blooms of yellow, orange, pink, white, purple & blue.  Flowers are strewn from here to there, seemingly at random, as if at the whim […]
    Kathy Vilim
  • The Wildlife Pond at Mount Cuba Center May 16, 2012
    I was thrilled to be invited to visit Mount Cuba Center last week, to interview some of the staff, and spend several delightful hours wandering around with my camera collecting images of this beautiful place, which is devoted to preserving the native plants of the Piedmont region. Mount Cuba Center is a 600 acre preserve […]
    Carole Sevilla Brown
  • My Garden’s Carbon Footprint May 15, 2012
    “It is difficult to bring people to goodness with lessons, but it is easy to do so by example.” ~Seneca   With spring we turn our attention in earnest to our gardens.  And this year as Earth Day loomed, I also turned my attention to what I was doing to be more environmentally conscious and earth friendly […]
    Donna Donabella
  • Build-A-Wetland May 14, 2012
    So I had my driveway re-done a few weeks ago, as I believe I mentioned, and as I was planting in the newly cleared space, it chanced to rain. And I discovered that while most of the area was pretty much exactly as it had been, there was a large section that now, as soon […]
    Ursula Vernon
  • A Tale of Quail May 11, 2012
    Just when I think I’ve run out of critters that will come to visit, someone new shows up. Wednesday we had some much-needed rain and the storm was ending. I glanced out the window that overlooks the backyard and I spotted a bird taking shelter under a wax myrtle. At first glance I thought it […]
    Loret T. Setters

#GardenChat

Something's Fishy...

All men are equal before fish.

~Herbert Hoover

In between weeding and harvesting (and the rain that seems to fall all the time) we found time to visit our local pond store. Though our toad populations are alive and well, our fish and bullfrogs have attracted the attention of a certain morning visitor on his (or her?) morning route:

Heron in nearby Black Creek. One visits our pond weekly.

We’ve been hesitant to re-stock our small pond until now. The creation of a large retaining pond up the road at a new housing development has diminished the visits from our heron friend and it seems like a perfect time to add more fish! We do have a few ( I think there’s three) left that hid under the overturned pots we placed at the bottom of the pond as a hiding spot, but to keep the mosquito populations down and keep the system balanced a few more members are necessary. Sunday we released six new fish, 4 Shubunkins and 2 Comets, into our pond. To keep them company we also addd three new bullfrog tadpoles, one nearly developed into a frog!

Comet fish for the pond.

The fish were placed into the pond, still in their bags to allow their body temperatures to adjust to the temperature change. After 15 minutes we opened the bag and they swam off to explore their new home. We’ve learned that we need to keep watch for about a week to make sure the new and older fish get along, every once in a while we find an older fish that bullies the newcomers. If that happens, we move the smaller fish to the shallow upper pond until they’re bigger.

Bullfrog tadpole nearly mature.

The bullfrog tadpoles go through the same routine of temperature adjustment and once released we’ll often see them sunning themselves along the floating cattail leaves just under the pond surface. Once mature we’ll listen for the familiar twang as they hunt among the rocks and water plants for food. Soon enough, we’ll discover more tadpoles as the cycle begins anew. Until then, all is quiet in the pond and everyone is happily nibbling away at duckweed roots and eating mosquito larvae and other insects. Isn’t nature grand?!

2 comments to Something’s Fishy…

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