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Pond for my turtles

PostPosted: Mon Sep 08, 2008 1:08 pm
by AGRL
Hi everyone!

i just found this community, and i really needed some help with my turtles and their habitat. English is not my first language though, so please, bare with me :oops:

I have two aquatic turtles, they are six years old now, and they are the size of an open hand. I can't keep them in a tank anymore, cause they soil the water way too fast, and the filters all break down. So i'm thinking of building a little pond outside.

I live in a place with pretty warm weather (13ÂșC in the winter), but i'm worried abot their hibernation, since i've kept them in heated water. Do they do it underwater? is there anything i need to take care of so they hibernate well?

i'm also concerned about the pond. we have a structure already built in stone (it has dirt and plants now) and the pond will be, at the most, 4 meters by 1 meter, ans one meter deep (13feet by 3 feet, and 3 feet deep - i think). We're plannig on doing it with liner covered with some round rocks. the thing is, we weren't planning on having a filter and a pump, because they are usually very expensive, just changing the water from time to time. Would that be ok, or is a pump really necessary? I also read somewhere that some plants act a natural filters...would that be enough for the amount of.. well... crap our turtles give us? would the plants survive changing the water?

as you can see, not only i write a lot, but i'm a total newbie on this :) could you please give me some advice?

PostPosted: Thu Sep 11, 2008 12:42 am
by steve
Hi, welcome to the site.

They would normally hibernate underwater, but it's not necessary or recommended for captive RES.

Filters and pumps are good because they collect physical debris and circulate/oxygenate the water. Stagnant water will be a breeding ground for insects/mosquitoes, so you should really have that. You should also have water heaters as I would not let the water go below 70F (21.1F) and pump will help circulate that warmth too.