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"animaux" wrote in message
... My husband doesn't know it, yet, but I plan to dig a hole for a liner and make a larger pond. This situation is different in that where I want to put the pond is in full sun in summer, but mostly shade in winter. Will that effect anything? You'll probably get lots of string algae. That's the main reason I shade my ponds, even though I also have hardy lilies & other plants that cover a lot of surface area. And I still get some algae. In that spot, the slope is about 5 degrees away from the house. I suppose on the shallow end I would imitate a "beach" so would have to figure a way to keep the edge up enough so the pond doesn't just pour off. Any suggestions? I can do the research, and I will, but if anyone actually has this situation please let me know what you did. Victoria We put in a slightly above ground-level pond about this time last year with a raised edge consisting of 2 levels of house brick. The liner wraps around the outside of the brick then back over the top so that the highest water level is higher than ground level. The top of the brick is finished off with paving stones and flagstone (whatever I could find locally) which covers the liner. I had seen the design in several (Ortho, Sunset) water garden books and it seems to work. Leveling was a problem and I'm still working on that but since I only have minnows in there, and whatever else shows up (snails; a gadzillion toad tadpoles), I'm not too concerned about perfection. The pond is still plenty deep (about 24") for the few fish in there to handle temperature changes. Gail near San Antonio TX Zone 8 |
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New pond, great. As for the sun and shade, it would probably be better the
other way around, but the pond will do fine. As for the digging and the slope away from the house, always throw the dirt downhill. This raises the lower end to make the pond level. Even the uphill side needs a little more dirt to raise the edge to keep runoff out of the pond. If the slope is large, as was mine, you may only have to dig half a hole. My larger pond has only one shovel depth of digging on the low side, and yet it is about 3 1/2 feet deep. The digging from the uphill side was used to build a berm and then landscape blocks used to hold that dirt up. -- RichToyBox http://www.geocities.com/richtoybox/pondintro.html "animaux" wrote in message ... My husband doesn't know it, yet, but I plan to dig a hole for a liner and make a larger pond. This situation is different in that where I want to put the pond is in full sun in summer, but mostly shade in winter. Will that effect anything? In that spot, the slope is about 5 degrees away from the house. I suppose on the shallow end I would imitate a "beach" so would have to figure a way to keep the edge up enough so the pond doesn't just pour off. Any suggestions? I can do the research, and I will, but if anyone actually has this situation please let me know what you did. Victoria |
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New pond, great. As for the sun and shade, it would probably be better the
other way around, but the pond will do fine. As for the digging and the slope away from the house, always throw the dirt downhill. This raises the lower end to make the pond level. Even the uphill side needs a little more dirt to raise the edge to keep runoff out of the pond. If the slope is large, as was mine, you may only have to dig half a hole. My larger pond has only one shovel depth of digging on the low side, and yet it is about 3 1/2 feet deep. The digging from the uphill side was used to build a berm and then landscape blocks used to hold that dirt up. -- RichToyBox http://www.geocities.com/richtoybox/pondintro.html "animaux" wrote in message ... My husband doesn't know it, yet, but I plan to dig a hole for a liner and make a larger pond. This situation is different in that where I want to put the pond is in full sun in summer, but mostly shade in winter. Will that effect anything? In that spot, the slope is about 5 degrees away from the house. I suppose on the shallow end I would imitate a "beach" so would have to figure a way to keep the edge up enough so the pond doesn't just pour off. Any suggestions? I can do the research, and I will, but if anyone actually has this situation please let me know what you did. Victoria |
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