In the courtyard at 5:00 a.m., with dewdrops still on the lotus leaves, I squatted on the green stone slab to debug a new filtration system. The koi at the bottom of the pond leisurely crossed my fingertips, and the water reflected the clients' expressions of anxiety to relief - this is the moment I cherish the most in my 20 years of practice.
Many people ask me: why do you specialize in fish pond filtration? The answer may be hidden in the sweltering summer of 2003. An old professor pointed to his own green fish pond and laughed bitterly: "The children think I'm raising fish, but I'm actually raising a pump repairman." This sentence as cold water splashed me awake: when the filtration system is reduced to "firefighters", and then the expensive fish, and then the feng shui layout, is ultimately trapped in the technical quagmire of the bonsai.
True professionalism begins with recognizing limitations
We never promise "lifetime maintenance-free", because any ecosystem requires human interaction; we refuse to use "nano", "quantum" and other concepts to package the basic technology, because the brush We refuse to use concepts such as "nano" and "quantum" to package the basic process, because 1mm more gap between brushes can lead to the collapse of biochemical warehouse.
Our engineers will visit three times with a dissolved oxygen meter before designing a filtration system for you:
This seemingly clumsy process once revitalized a century-old fish pond in a Beijing courtyard house - when it was detected that the green bricks at the bottom of the pond would continue to release alkaline substances, we gave up the conventional coral bone filtration material and switched to a dynamically balanced solution of volcanic rock + submerged plants. On a return visit three years later, the pool had naturally reproduced peach blossom jellyfish.
The temperature of technology: reverence hidden in the details
You may not notice the designs:
These details didn't appear in the proposal book, but allowed us to set a record of eight consecutive years without ice in an outdoor fish pond at -30°C in the northeast - not by black technology, but by the conventional wisdom of wrapping wool felt around the outside of buried pipes.
A Letter to Peers and Clients
Recently, I always see peers in the live broadcast shouting "three days completely clear water", the heart inevitably stings. This industry needs more people to sink down and do three things:
As I write these words, a one-eyed koi is swimming in the studio's display pond - it came from a polluted pond that was judged "unsalvageable" and is now the children's favorite, "The Pirate Captain! "The Pirate Captain. Isn't the ultimate mission of a filtration system to safeguard this unexpected meeting of people and life?