Pond dye is non-toxic and safe for fish...the stuff we have is actually made out of food grade ingredients. The biggest risk you have for fish is normally low oxygen...so you want to limit algae blooms, weed issues, and aerate if possible. If you need help with any of those things specifically, contact me through our website at pondalgaesolutions.com.
I have not had it do that. Although I suppose it would depend on how heavy you went with the coloring. I mean out of the bottle it's very concentrated...get it on your hands, clothes, and you'll be seeing it for awhile. Diluted properly to add just a tint to the winter, I don't think you'd see it. The product is food grade so it won't hurt anything, but with a blue dog, you might end up on youtube:) Keep in mind if algae is breaching the surface I don't think dye will help very much. If everything is under the water, or starting under the water at the bottom, then it might be helpful.
Well, I guess the term natural is somewhat broad in that it's meant to infer non-chemical management. The dye we use now is a food grade product. But like a lot of things these days, natural doesn't necessarily mean organic or as naturally found in nature which I think is a good and strict definition.
Does this stuff have any affects on fish? I really don't want to harm the fish we have a 3acre tank
Pond dye is non-toxic and safe for fish...the stuff we have is actually made out of food grade ingredients. The biggest risk you have for fish is normally low oxygen...so you want to limit algae blooms, weed issues, and aerate if possible. If you need help with any of those things specifically, contact me through our website at pondalgaesolutions.com.
Will this turn dogs and ducks blue?
I have not had it do that. Although I suppose it would depend on how heavy you went with the coloring. I mean out of the bottle it's very concentrated...get it on your hands, clothes, and you'll be seeing it for awhile. Diluted properly to add just a tint to the winter, I don't think you'd see it. The product is food grade so it won't hurt anything, but with a blue dog, you might end up on youtube:) Keep in mind if algae is breaching the surface I don't think dye will help very much. If everything is under the water, or starting under the water at the bottom, then it might be helpful.
i kind of get why someone would use this, I'm just finding it hard to understand how natural pond and dye go in the same sentence.
Well, I guess the term natural is somewhat broad in that it's meant to infer non-chemical management. The dye we use now is a food grade product. But like a lot of things these days, natural doesn't necessarily mean organic or as naturally found in nature which I think is a good and strict definition.