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Solution for hiding liner



 
 
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  #1  
Old April 19th 05, 01:03 AM
Sue777
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Posts: n/a
Default Solution for hiding liner

Hi.
I'm normally just a lurker here, but I finally found the answer to my
problem of ugly liner showing (between the water line and the rock
edging) and thought I'd share. I don't want to sound like I'm spamming
or anything, though.... I have no affiliation with the company I bought
it from, so if you want to know where I got it, feel free to send me an
e-mail. The product is called "Edge It" - a sort of "grow bag" for
pond plants. It's a fabric(?)tube of rot and puncture free material
with an attached flap. You fill the tube with soil (or with some plants
you wouldn't even need soil), then place at the edge of your pond with
the flap on the ground held in place by your rock edging. Cut little
crosses in the tube and plant your plants. The tube will be in contact
with the pond water so the soil and plant roots are moist at all times.


After years of trying all kinds of clever and creative tricks to hide
that ugly liner (including plastic plants) I've finally got it, and am
very grateful! Hope this helps someone else, too, because I'm sure
I'm not the only one who has that exposed liner above the water line.

Sue

  #2  
Old April 19th 05, 01:22 AM
Gareee©
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Posts: n/a
Default

"Sue777" wrote in message
ups.com...
Hi.
I'm normally just a lurker here, but I finally found the answer to my
problem of ugly liner showing (between the water line and the rock
edging) and thought I'd share. I don't want to sound like I'm spamming
or anything, though.... I have no affiliation with the company I bought
it from, so if you want to know where I got it, feel free to send me an
e-mail. The product is called "Edge It" - a sort of "grow bag" for
pond plants. It's a fabric(?)tube of rot and puncture free material
with an attached flap. You fill the tube with soil (or with some plants
you wouldn't even need soil), then place at the edge of your pond with
the flap on the ground held in place by your rock edging. Cut little
crosses in the tube and plant your plants. The tube will be in contact
with the pond water so the soil and plant roots are moist at all times.


After years of trying all kinds of clever and creative tricks to hide
that ugly liner (including plastic plants) I've finally got it, and am
very grateful! Hope this helps someone else, too, because I'm sure
I'm not the only one who has that exposed liner above the water line.


That's a great idea! I'll bet you could easily do something like that with
burplap, or other materials...


--
Gareee's Homepage:
http://www.fortunecity.com/tattooine.../mainframe.htm

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  #3  
Old April 19th 05, 01:23 AM
Mike Patterson
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Posts: n/a
Default

I don't suppose you'd have a link to that product would you?

Googling gets tons and tons of computer/IT related sites, and none of
my efforts to refine the search seem to help.

TIA
Mike

On 18 Apr 2005 17:03:47 -0700, "Sue777" wrote:

Hi.
I'm normally just a lurker here, but I finally found the answer to my
problem of ugly liner showing (between the water line and the rock
edging) and thought I'd share. I don't want to sound like I'm spamming
or anything, though.... I have no affiliation with the company I bought
it from, so if you want to know where I got it, feel free to send me an
e-mail. The product is called "Edge It" - a sort of "grow bag" for
pond plants. It's a fabric(?)tube of rot and puncture free material
with an attached flap. You fill the tube with soil (or with some plants
you wouldn't even need soil), then place at the edge of your pond with
the flap on the ground held in place by your rock edging. Cut little
crosses in the tube and plant your plants. The tube will be in contact
with the pond water so the soil and plant roots are moist at all times.


After years of trying all kinds of clever and creative tricks to hide
that ugly liner (including plastic plants) I've finally got it, and am
very grateful! Hope this helps someone else, too, because I'm sure
I'm not the only one who has that exposed liner above the water line.

Sue


Mike Patterson
Please remove the spamtrap to email me.
"I always wanted to be somebody...I should have been more specific..." - Lily Tomlin

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  #4  
Old April 19th 05, 01:39 AM
Gareee©
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Posts: n/a
Default

"Mike Patterson" wrote in message
...
I don't suppose you'd have a link to that product would you?

Googling gets tons and tons of computer/IT related sites, and none of
my efforts to refine the search seem to help.


Google "Edge-It pond"

6th link...

--
Gareee's Homepage:
http://www.fortunecity.com/tattooine.../mainframe.htm

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  #5  
Old April 19th 05, 01:57 AM
CanadianCowboy
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Posts: n/a
Default

Thank you very much !!

Although in hindsight the best way to hide the lines is to make sure the
pond is perfectly level all around and then put rocks past the inside
edge and fill to the top.

I did say hindsight though ????

Sue777 wrote:
Hi.
I'm normally just a lurker here, but I finally found the answer to my
problem of ugly liner showing (between the water line and the rock
edging) and thought I'd share. I don't want to sound like I'm spamming
or anything, though.... I have no affiliation with the company I bought
it from, so if you want to know where I got it, feel free to send me an
e-mail. The product is called "Edge It" - a sort of "grow bag" for
pond plants. It's a fabric(?)tube of rot and puncture free material
with an attached flap. You fill the tube with soil (or with some plants
you wouldn't even need soil), then place at the edge of your pond with
the flap on the ground held in place by your rock edging. Cut little
crosses in the tube and plant your plants. The tube will be in contact
with the pond water so the soil and plant roots are moist at all times.


After years of trying all kinds of clever and creative tricks to hide
that ugly liner (including plastic plants) I've finally got it, and am
very grateful! Hope this helps someone else, too, because I'm sure
I'm not the only one who has that exposed liner above the water line.

Sue

  #6  
Old April 19th 05, 03:41 AM
Gareee©
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"CanadianCowboy" wrote in message
.. .
Thank you very much !!

Although in hindsight the best way to hide the lines is to make sure the
pond is perfectly level all around and then put rocks past the inside edge
and fill to the top.

I did say hindsight though ????


Yeah, RIGHT! My pond is on our yard, which is on a mountain, and if you saw
the rocks we pulled out by hand when we dug it our, you wouldn't believe
some of them!

Because of the slope, we can't even get any dirt delivered even close, so I
end up moving it either by renting a min track hoe, or with a small trailer
pulled by the riding lawn mower.

Leveling is a PITA here...


--
Gareee's Homepage:
http://www.fortunecity.com/tattooine.../mainframe.htm

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  #7  
Old April 19th 05, 06:30 AM
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

The way I hid the liner is to build a "rock shelf". It was about 4"
lower than the top of the pond. I put the big moss rock boulders on the
shelf and filled the pond so that the rocks were part submerged in the
water. On the top of the pond, I covered the liner with smaller rocks.

Works great. I only see liner when the water gets WAY too low.

-ikiru

*enjoy the sauce*

  #8  
Old April 19th 05, 01:06 PM
kc
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Have any pics?
Kirsten
wrote in message
oups.com...
The way I hid the liner is to build a "rock shelf". It was about 4"
lower than the top of the pond. I put the big moss rock boulders on the
shelf and filled the pond so that the rocks were part submerged in the
water. On the top of the pond, I covered the liner with smaller rocks.

Works great. I only see liner when the water gets WAY too low.

-ikiru

*enjoy the sauce*



  #9  
Old April 19th 05, 06:02 PM
///Owen\\\\\\
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Sue777 wrote:
Hi.
I'm normally just a lurker here, but I finally found the answer to my
problem of ugly liner showing (between the water line and the rock
edging) and thought I'd share. I don't want to sound like I'm
spamming or anything, though.... I have no affiliation with the
company I bought it from, so if you want to know where I got it, feel
free to send me an e-mail. The product is called "Edge It" - a sort
of "grow bag" for pond plants. It's a fabric(?)tube of rot and
puncture free material with an attached flap. You fill the tube with
soil (or with some plants you wouldn't even need soil), then place at
the edge of your pond with the flap on the ground held in place by
your rock edging. Cut little crosses in the tube and plant your
plants. The tube will be in contact with the pond water so the soil
and plant roots are moist at all times.


After years of trying all kinds of clever and creative tricks to hide
that ugly liner (including plastic plants) I've finally got it, and am
very grateful! Hope this helps someone else, too, because I'm sure
I'm not the only one who has that exposed liner above the water line.

Sue

===============================

Do you have more details?


  #10  
Old April 19th 05, 08:10 PM
Sue777
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Hi. Sorry - I would have posted the link but I thought that was
considered spamming and wasn't allowed. Glad some of you managed to
find it. Don't be scared off by the fact that the store is located in
the UK..... Harry just figures out the cheapest way to get it to the
states (he even removes all unnecessary packaging/cardboard) and then
has you order a couple of cheap plumbing parts to cover the cost of
shipping. (you don't actually receive the couplings - that's just a
convenient way to pay the postage).

Anyway, it's a great product, and I'm surprised I couldn't find
anything like that in the states. At least not YET.

 




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