Kobeclone;1720937; said:
Everyone is only talking about heating the pond. With it getting down to possibly 0 degrees F in your gargage, it will be much cheaper in the long run to heat the room....
I have seen that idea posted here before when talking about heating ponds in the winter, but Im not sure about that.
I live in the northern most section of North Dakota, USA and it gets down to about -45 to -50 below zero here in the winter.
My garage is darn cold in the morning, so cold that just to get the car started I have to make sure I plugged it in the night before.
If I were to attempt to heat my garage up warm enough to keep water from turning to ice I would need to totally reinsulate the garage top to bottom.
It would have to become as well insulated as the main house.
Even the floor would need to be redone or I would never hear the garage heater turn off.
It just seems to me that the money I would spend just to get the whole 2 car garage warm enough to not need the heat the indoor pond out there would make the attempt out of my reach $!
It just seems to me that the best, cheapest way to heat a indoor pond in a unheated room over the winter would be to cover the pond in thick blankets of insulation.
It just seems to me that if you have the pond covered up well enough that the result would be that you might not even need that big of a underwater heater to keep the pond at a nice temp for the fish...
Am I wrong about thinking this?
Im interested in this topic myself as i also have just added a new indoor pond to a unheated porch on the side of my house.
My porch is totally without any insulation at all, and has mostly single thickness glass for walls.
I had the hope to just wrap the pond in a covering of insulation during the winter with only a few underwater aqaurium heaters heating the pond's water....