~o~
Saturday 5th 39F/4C [7.30] Bright but rather cloudy. Increasingly breezy from the north east. The clouds seem to be moving quite quickly from the north Two more days of sunshine promised but at lower temperatures. Today might reach nearly 9C/48F.
Up at 6.15 after another quiet night. Lower back pain may be the result of a day wasted on the computer. No immediate plans beyond my morning walk.
8.40 41F/5C. Overcast! Well past time for a walk.
9.00 And back again. I only walked a few hundred meters along the road before turning back. The wind made it feel very chilly. Not nice at all.
Moved here from yesterday's post:
The Chemo/Cemo colour options [and blue.] These are a smaller model but images of the 1500l are hard to find online. The image below of the grey container is the correct model but gives little sense of the proportions.
I
am looking at options to house a raised, rectangular goldfish pond. Using a green [or grey?] GRP, industrial storage container out in the
greenhouse. The outside of this container could be covered in timber
boards. To make it look more attractive. Though the tanks themselves are
smooth and cosmetically acceptable in their own right. Shall we say
more purposeful than deliberate greenhouse furniture.
A
level, plywood base would not raise it any more than necessary. The base would need to be strong and load spreading. Only high enough to allow a seated person to
easily admire the contents. I do not have any reason [at all] to be out
in the greenhouse at present. Which is a bit of waste. The greenhouse's considerable
volume could house many plants. Though probably only the hardiest of
cacti at present!
The
greenhouse's double, open door width is 85cm. The range of containers I
am admiring are [by happy coincidence] 81cm high in a variety of
increasing volumes. I could easily slide quite a large container on its side through the open greenhouse doors. [Tapered walls willing.] Using suitable battens,
boards or plywood on the ground and floor. Which will protect the container's
finish. Not to mention making it upright while siding it on its edge. The dry weight of
the larger 1500 liter containers is just under 50kg. Manageable, but a
bit lumpy for one old fart to move around on his own. One mistake and
the greenhouse could become an expensive repair job!
The
size limit is on how much I am willing to allow the tank to project. Out into the greenhouse
area from the glass, front wall. With some nominal clearance, of course.
The kitchen end of the
greenhouse is presently no man's land. This is due to several years of untouched clutter.
Mostly my wife's stuff. If that was cleared there would be lots of room. I rarely need to go in and out of the doors that end of the greenhouse anyway. Only the doors at the drive end are ever
used. For bringing in logs using a wheelbarrow.
The
cost of these containers is a fraction of any glass, fish tank of
remotely the same length. Let alone width and depth. Goldfish tend to
grow rapidly in suitable conditions. They are already stretching
the acceptable limits in the secondhand aquarium I bought. 100x50x50cm and
250liters. Two tiny fish have grown to almost half the 50cm dimensions. Well, not quite, but appearances aren't that far off.
The
minimum size of container I would consider is 700 liters. With 1100 and
1500 liter models readily available at the same height. Depending on
how much floor space I am willing to sacrifice out in the greenhouse.
The 1500 liter container is 182x139x81cm. That would be six times
larger than the indoor aquarium. The greenhouse is 2.6m deep.
260-139=121cm. Plenty of room to move past the tank. Which will be
quite low at about 85cm to the rim. I'll try not to fall in! At least not when the water is cold.
Any
outdoor
pond risks becoming the prey of the many herons in the area. I have
already suffered from the attentions of a heron's pointy beak. While
rescuing it from a protective net on the outdoor pond. If Danish winters
ever return to normal. Then the outdoor pond would be covered in thick
snow or ice for weeks.
Not
to mention the constant rain of leaves. Falling from the surrounding
and overhanging trees. The fish were never visible before they ended up
in a heron's tummy. Thanks also to the floating pond weed. An indoor
pond would allow me to watch their antics. Perhaps in slightly greater
numbers than the indoor aquarium.
I
will not get the side view of the fish. Afforded by an inset window or glass
aquarium. However, the much greater width and length of the pond. Will
allow a clear view as the colourful fish approach the surface. I do not
much like black ponds. So will not use rubber or plastic sheeting to
make my own indoor pond from plywood. A preformed container will also
avoid ugly folds.
The grey colour option is beginning to seem a far more sensible than my first choice of green. It will reflect more
light than green. Making the fish easier to see under constantly
changing light conditions. No doubt the inside surfaces will become
green with algae if not cleaned regularly. Particularly in sunlight.
There
are clear plastic cylinders widely available. Which allow fish to swim
above the pond surface. The cylinder remains constantly filled with
water by excluding air during filling. That might make for an
interesting addition.
One
detail I haven't yet mentioned is water's ability to store heat. Such a
large volume of water will help to ameliorate the rapid temperature
changes currently enjoyed by the greenhouse. The water will absorb solar warmth
during the day and only slowly release it overnight. This should help to
reduce the soaring, daytime temperatures. While preventing rapid
cooling overnight.
It is common practice to stack oil drums full of
water in solar greenhouses. To act as heat sinks. This can moderate temperature swings. Enough to allow plants
to survive and even grow well. Where outside temperatures are totally
unsuitable for plant growth. In desert conditions or old, northerly climates.
A
grey tank should have lower solar heat absorption than a green one. The
recent run of sunny weather has resulted in afternoon greenhouse
temperatures exceeding 110F/43C! This is in spring. With only quite
modest outside temperatures. Around 50F/10C or slightly higher. The
greenhouse temperature extremes are entirely due to solar gain and a
lack of heat sinks. A solar oven by any other name. I laid a herringbone pattern of bricks
on the floor when I built the lean-to greenhouse. This helps to absorb some heat. The southern house wall
is white painted brick. With a few, small windows. Not much heat sinking there.
I
should soon be adding the doubled shade nets to the greenhouse roof. Because they reduce the
sun's heat from entering the greenhouse. Once it has passed through the glass the
sun's heat is very difficult to control. I have both double end doors
open during the day in summer. For any through draft to help vent some of the heat. With fine weldmesh
security and insect blocking netting over the wide open doors. Plus the
commercial quality shade netting on the roof and front wall of the
greenhouse.
It
is obvious that I do not want stray animals or insects entering the
warm greenhouse. Deer are regular visitors and wander everywhere. Then
there are numerous domestic cats and strays. Rodents would enjoy the cosy
conditions too. I have seen a tiny mouse running into the corner out there. To promptly disappear into the floor.
10.20 43F/6C. It is brightening up as the cloud thins. I feel a modest ride would be in order. Somewhere around 25-30km will take me to several places I want to visit.
13.00 46F/7.8C. Sunny. Back from a 37km ride to the shops. There was a horribly cold wind throughout. With my eyes streaming despite the wraparound sunglasses. There was no protection for my nose streaming. I was just beginning to feel saddle discomfort towards the end of the ride. Am I having fun yet?
The greenhouse is at 100F/38C again and all internal doors door have been opened. It reached 68F/20C in the room.
8.15 Dinner was mackerel in tomato sauce on toast. Followed by a glass of the excellent, locally produced apple juice. Kindly provided by my English friend. The room has already dropped to 64F/18C. I had better light the stove.
~o~