Cliff & schmism,
The brown water is caused by either a positive or negative charge to my water. From what I understand, when the water washes over my soil on it's way to the pond, it picks up this electrical charge. This in turns, suspends clay particles in the water. It will never settle on it's own.
The cure is to nutralize the electrical charge with gypsum. There are other things that will do this too, but gypsum is the cheapest and easiest for me to get. It's also called sheetrock at the store, but the powdered version is more effective.
When the pond was down last year, I threw all my sheetrock scraps from my house into the water. The results were noticable the next day. A few days later, and I had clear water.
Clear water looks nice, but there is a huge problem with alge. I'm undecided which is worse, alge or brown water????
So far, I'm not doing anything else until I finish digging my well and have an ability to keep water in the pond next summer.
Nat,
The white thing behind me in that picture is actually the silver galvalume room of the container barn. I'm sure you remember that thread way back when? hahahaha I sold it and the land at the top of that hill behind me is the property line.
MossRoad,
I had a terrible time gettting the pallets to stay under water. They are four to a stack and each stack took 8 blocks to hold in place. I was kind of comical as Steph and the kids were in the boat with the bocks as I tried to place them and hold the stack down at the same time. Now that they have been in the water about 5 months, they seem to be pretty well anchored.
I was told they would help with the fish spawning. I don't know if I needed them as I couldn't tell one way or another if they helped or not. They were taking up space without any good use, so I figured it couldn't hurt.
Eddie