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Thread: Overwintering a small outdoor frog pond

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    Default Overwintering a small outdoor frog pond

    Hi - I'm a new member of FrogForum and in my first year of frog obsession.

    This spring I installed a 5'x7'x18" preformed pond liner in my Maryland yard, put some dirt in the bottom and added some water and pond plants, and a couple of weeks later had hundreds of tadpoles. The pond has been a great success and by late summer I had at least 5 large-ish frogs (green frogs), with many more small frogs hopping around nearby. So far, I've left the pond completely alone and it's done great, becoming a neat little ecosystem with tiny snails and various water bugs in addition to the frogs.

    Now it's fall and leaves are starting to clog up the water. Is this ok, or should I remove some of them? I'm also looking for advice on how to overwinter. I'm in Zone 7b, and we usually get a few weeks when the ground freezes about 6-10" deep. I'm anticipating that the water surface will freeze over, but that the rest of the water will stay unfrozen. There's plenty of muck and dead leaves in the bottom, and relatively soft soil around the pond, so the frogs can burrow in to hibernate. Does anyone have experience with overwintering an outdoor frog pond? I'd be delighted to hear what you have to say. Thanks!

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    100+ Post Member Larry Wardog's Avatar
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    Default Re: Overwintering a small outdoor frog pond

    You can clean some leaves out. Honestly if you want to make sure the pond stays safe for the frogs then purchase a pond deicer to keep a hole in the ice so the frogs can breathe. It's a myth frogs just burrow underwater in muck. They hibernate in spots where the water continues to move and produce air flow. If no air flow and the water freezes the top the frogs and anything under the water will die. It's cool you made a natural pond!

    Sent from my BLN-L24 using Tapatalk

  4. #3

    Default Re: Overwintering a small outdoor frog pond

    Quote Originally Posted by Larry Wardog View Post
    You can clean some leaves out. Honestly if you want to make sure the pond stays safe for the frogs then purchase a pond deicer to keep a hole in the ice so the frogs can breathe. It's a myth frogs just burrow underwater in muck. They hibernate in spots where the water continues to move and produce air flow. If no air flow and the water freezes the top the frogs and anything under the water will die. It's cool you made a natural pond!

    Sent from my BLN-L24 using Tapatalk

    Thank you - I really appreciate your advice! I didn't realize that freezing over would be so harmful or that air flow was so critical (although it certainly makes sense). I'll get myself a deicer.

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