When the Prairie Blows:
Dust Storm Aftermath and What It Means for Your Pond
The dust storms that swept across Southern Manitoba in late May 2026 were not a typical prairie wind event. The volume of topsoil, organic debris, and particulate matter displaced into water bodies was substantial — and the effects on pond health are still unfolding right now, in June.
If your aeration system is running poorly, your water is murkier than it should be for this time of year, or an unusual smell has appeared over the past few weeks — this is not coincidence. It is a direct consequence of that storm, and it is something we are seeing across dozens of commercial and municipal ponds throughout Southern Manitoba.
This month's blog breaks down exactly what happened, why it matters for your water body, and what you need to do about it before the summer heat makes a difficult situation significantly worse.
What the Storm Actually Put Into Your Pond
Prairie dust storms are rare and powerful events — and this one was well outside the range of normal. Unlike a standard wind event that picks up surface particles, a major storm of this scale mobilizes topsoil, dried crop residue, decomposing organics, pollen, and fine clay particles. In Southern Manitoba's flat drainage geography, a significant portion of that material settled directly into ponds, dugouts, retention basins, and open water bodies across the region.
The material deposited in these water bodies carries with it a significant nutrient load — primarily phosphorus and nitrogen bound to the topsoil particles. Once that material enters the water, two things happen simultaneously: some settles to the bottom and adds directly to the sludge layer, while some remains suspended in the water column, suppressing dissolved oxygen and dramatically increasing the biological oxygen demand.
Why Your Aeration System Is Struggling
One of the most common calls we have been receiving since the storm is this: "My aerator doesn't seem to be doing much." It's a legitimate concern, and the explanation is directly tied to what the storm deposited at the bottom of your pond.
Fine-bubble diffusers — the gold standard in pond aeration — work by releasing millions of tiny bubbles from porous ceramic or membrane elements positioned at the pond bottom. Those micro-pores are precisely engineered to maximize oxygen transfer into the water column. When blow dirt and suspended organics enter the pond in high volumes, they do something predictable but serious: they coat and clog those diffuser membranes, reducing bubble output to a fraction of design capacity.
A clogged diffuser doesn't necessarily stop running — it often just becomes inefficient. The compressor is on, the air lines are pressurized, but oxygen transfer at the water column is a fraction of what it should be. This is why ponds that were performing well all spring may suddenly look and smell like they have been neglected for months.
The Water Quality Picture Right Now
Beyond the aeration system, the storm's organic and sediment load has created a measurably different water chemistry profile than these ponds would normally carry in early June. Our field assessments across the affected region are showing a consistent pattern of four compounding stressors:
Together, these four stressors mean that affected ponds entering June 2026 are significantly more vulnerable to algae blooms than they would be in a typical year. With warm temperatures arriving and extended daylight hours, the conditions for a rapid and severe bloom event are in place. Acting now — before visible bloom development — is far more effective and far less costly than reacting once the problem is established.
"Many ponds in Southern MB experienced a heavy amount of blow dirt and organics entering their ponds — so much so the aeration systems are not running well. It's negatively affecting water quality with an increased nutrient load."
— Clean Water Pro Field Assessment Team, June 2026A Serious Warning: Blue-Green Algae Risk This Season
Southern Manitoba carries algae pressure in summer every year. But 2026 is shaping up to be a meaningfully higher-risk season for ponds in the affected areas — not because of anything unusual in the weather forecast, but because of what entered those ponds in May.
Blue-green algae (cyanobacteria) — the variety that produces toxins dangerous to livestock, pets, and humans — thrives exactly in the conditions that this storm has created: high available nutrients, reduced water clarity, weakened water circulation, and suppressed dissolved oxygen. The combination of a major external nutrient event with an impaired aeration system is precisely the scenario that leads to severe late-summer cyanobacteria blooms.
The good news is that proactive management substantially reduces the probability of a serious bloom event. Ponds with functioning aeration, a healthy biological community, and moderate nutrient levels are far more resistant to cyanobacteria dominance — even in a high-nutrient year like this one. The interventions below will make a material difference if applied now.
What to Do — In Order of Priority
If your pond was in the affected region, here is the sequence of actions we recommend working through, starting immediately:
This is the most time-sensitive action. If your system has purge capability, open the valve and run it until you see clear, vigorous bubbling resume at the surface. If you are unsure whether your system supports purging — or if your system does not have a purge valve — call us before doing anything else. Forcing air through a severely fouled membrane under high pressure can cause damage to some system types.
If you have a DO meter, take readings at mid-depth and again near the bottom. Readings below 4 mg/L indicate a system under significant stress. Below 2 mg/L is a critical threshold that requires immediate intervention — particularly if your pond supports fish, which can begin dying without visible warning at these levels.
Beneficial bacteria applied now will begin processing the storm-deposited organic load before it fully settles into sludge and drives further nutrient release. This is proactive biology at work — the bacteria compete with algae for the same nutrients, while also accelerating the decomposition of deposited organics. June is still early enough for this approach to be highly effective.
If you have not had your water tested since before the storm, now is the right time. A current reading of phosphorus, nitrogen, turbidity, dissolved oxygen, and pH gives you a clear picture of how much of a nutrient load you are actually managing — and sets a baseline against which you can measure improvement through the season.
Even after purging and treatment, keep close watch on your pond through the hottest weeks of the season. Surface scum, a shift toward green or blue-green colouration, or a strengthening odor are early indicators that conditions are deteriorating faster than the treatment program can manage — and that you need an immediate follow-up assessment. Do not wait for the problem to become obvious before calling.
The Long Game: Don't Underestimate the Sludge Load
One consequence of this event that will not be immediately visible is the addition of a new layer of material to the sediment at the bottom of your pond. The blow dirt and organics that settled there will decompose slowly over the coming months — releasing nutrients into the water column in a sustained cycle that extends well beyond this summer.
For ponds that were already carrying a significant sludge depth before the storm, this additional load may push them into a category where physical or biological sludge reduction becomes a functional requirement rather than an optional maintenance item. A heavily sludged pond bottom physically impairs diffuser performance over time — burying elements, restricting airflow, and reducing the oxygen transfer efficiency that your system was designed to deliver.
Fall is the optimal window for sludge reduction treatment. Cooler water slows algae but beneficial bacteria remain highly active — giving biological sludge-digestion products the best opportunity to work before freeze-up. We would encourage any pond operator affected by this event to flag sludge reduction as a priority item for their September service cycle. The storm added to the problem; fall is when you address it at the source.
Is Your Pond Showing Post-Storm Symptoms?
Our team is conducting storm-response assessments across Southern Manitoba right now. We'll evaluate your diffuser system condition, current water quality profile, and nutrient load — and give you a clear, prioritized action plan for the rest of the season.
Book a Post-Storm Assessment →