Pond Boss
Posted By: Skillsaw00 Sonar? - 04/14/05 01:03 AM
I am looking for the cheapest place to purchase a pint of Sonar.I have duckweed already coming back and was wanting to try Sonar this year.I used Reward last year but couldn't keep it under control.Thank you,
Posted By: TexasTilop Re: Sonar? - 04/14/05 11:40 AM
Try Boatcycle Fish Farm Supply - 800/333-9154
Posted By: DunDat Re: Sonar? - 04/28/05 12:43 AM
estes chemicals sells a lot of sonar in TX one of there guys posts on this board duffie is his name not sure about KY, maybe check with aquatic controls in Indiana
Posted By: Cary Martin Re: Sonar? - 04/28/05 12:19 PM
DunDat-

SePro, the manufacture of Sonar does not give special pricing to some dealers and not others. They are like some car dealers that this is the price and there is no other discounts.

I would check with the big chemical warehouses like Hellena Chemical, United Horticulture Prodcuts, Cygnet, ProSource One, Aquatic Control etc.

Because they purchase in quantity, they may be able to sell it at a larger discount.
Posted By: Kelly Duffie Re: Sonar? - 05/07/05 03:33 PM
Cary - to clarify your partially-correct comments:
SePRO markets their 1-gal. and 40-lb/30-lb pails of SONAR AS & SONAR Q/PR/SRP (respectively) under an "agency" arrangement - where pricing is generally "set" by the mfgr when products are purchased from a designated "agent" within a defined territory. However, pints, quarts and 8# pails of SONAR are not included under the same arrangement and are sold at open-market pricing.

I don't know what qualifies as a "big chemical warehouse" company to you, but Estes Inc operates in 5 states, with 18+ warehouses and well over $150MM in annual sales. We are the only SONAR agent in TX, OK and NM - but also service AR and LA as a SePRO-designated agent.

Our primary customer-base consists of dealers, commercial application companies and government entities. We're generally not staffed, promoted and "store-fronted" to service the retail/end-user market in the same manner as our valued dealer and custom-applicator customers. Therefore, we do our best to support these important links in an efficient and value-added distribution-chain (meaning that I would encourage small pond-owners to place higher values on provided services and advice, rather than focusing on saving a few bucks by seeking the absolute cheapest price from any business that cannot offer intelligent & experienced advice).

I enjoy contributing to this board, since the subjects and info-exchange are of personal interest to me. I certainly don't invest my time here from a commercial standpoint (unlike a few others).

Bottom-line: Few people shop around for the cheapest doctor, since they usually want the best healthcare advice available - assuming the price is affordable (in this case, how do you define "affordable"?).
If I was a pond-owner, with a relatively large investment in my pond's construction and fish-population management, I would seek my pond-supply OR service-provider based on similar selection-criteria (ie. experience, qualifications and willingness to assist with problems) - and not based on the cheapest price.
See some wise words of wisdom below.

WHAT IS YOUR "BEST PRICE"?

It is unwise to pay too much, but it's much worse to pay too little.

When you pay too much, you usually lose only a little money - that's all.

When you pay too little, you sometimes lose everything, because the product or service that you bought was incapable of providing the desired result for which it was purchased.

The common law of business-balance prohibits paying a little and getting a lot; it can't be done!

If you deal with the lowest bidder or the cheapest product, it is often necessary to budget a little extra expense for the risk that you take in order "to save a little money", and if you do that you will have enough to pay for something better that works the first time.
Posted By: Meadowlark Re: Sonar? - 05/09/05 01:22 PM
Kelly,

Well said, well said indeed.

"It is unwise to pay too much, but it's much worse to pay too little."

Applies to a lot of things....including using dog food for fish and IVOMEC for dogs, just to mention a couple of other examples.
Posted By: Tom R. Lane Re: Sonar? - 06/11/07 06:46 PM
Great, I know where to get Sonar, can you tell me when is the best time to treat? (I assume early spring) How much should I use in a 2 acre pond average depth 8 ft, deepest 15 ft. Is this the best thing to use on Sago pondweed or cootail? Can I treat it now because it is taking over 80-90% of my pond to the surface.
Posted By: ewest Re: Sonar? - 06/11/07 07:28 PM
Tom welcome. Here is some info I think will help. The 3rd one is a Sonar label which may help but first read the first 2 links for context.

http://aquaplant.tamu.edu/database/submerged_plants/sago_pondweed_mgmt.htm

http://aquaplant.tamu.edu/database/submerged_plants/coontail_mgmt.htm

http://plants.ifas.ufl.edu/guide/sonaras_label.pdf
Posted By: Bill Cody Re: Sonar? - 06/12/07 02:45 AM
I would be very careful at eliminating a pond full of weeds (80%-90% coverage) in the warm water of summer. A massive weed kill will cause a strong reduction of dissolved oxygen which may result in a fish kill. Several factors such as temperature, amount of sunshine, amount of phytoplankton, presence of lake dyes and average pond depth will come into play here.
Posted By: JMAC Re: Sonar? - 12/13/07 06:29 PM
I believe Phoenix is coming out with a new floridone product for this coming summer, should be cheaper than Sonar. Search for Whitecap, I believe that's the new trade name.
© Pond Boss Forum