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#1
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Hi everyone. We just purchased a new home and I know it's too late to dig
our pond this year, but we're not sure where to put it in the spring. The back is southern exposure, with a small slope 1/4 way into it and several trees including one very large Pine. Here is a pic of the back garden, any ideas on where is best? (The kiddy stuff is going as our son is 13.) Oh and the big vegetation to the left of the arbor that goes nowhere is the previous owners veggie garden which we'll be getting rid of. http://www.britsintheus.com/backgarden.jpg Lisa |
#2
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What a question... I would pick Santa Barbara
![]() Ok, Actually there can be many right places... my personal choice favorite would be a location where you could enjoy the view from both the indside and outside. This currently doesn't exist for my house, so I am adding an addition in the spring that will have a great view of the pond. ![]() around the pond. Now, if you don't have a good view from anywhere inside the house then I would pick a spot near your favorite location/sitting/relaxing spot outside. This way you enjoy your pond and fish friends all the more. Coffee/Pop by the pond is extremely relaxing. Of course, there are some other things to take into consideration while planning... location of trees(fall foliage in the bottom of a cold pond)... underground wires/pipes(ones you don't want to hit)... location of electrical outlet(ones to run the pump/filtration)... how easy is the location to prep for winter... I am sure others wil add more... |
#3
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Yeah, I would agree with Chad, looking at the photo alone I would have to
say one place is as good as another, the question is how does it relate to your house for view, access and the big one GFI protected power. "Steve and Lisa" wrote in message . .. Hi everyone. We just purchased a new home and I know it's too late to dig our pond this year, but we're not sure where to put it in the spring. The back is southern exposure, with a small slope 1/4 way into it and several trees including one very large Pine. Here is a pic of the back garden, any ideas on where is best? (The kiddy stuff is going as our son is 13.) Oh and the big vegetation to the left of the arbor that goes nowhere is the previous owners veggie garden which we'll be getting rid of. http://www.britsintheus.com/backgarden.jpg Lisa |
#4
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"Steve and Lisa" wrote in message
. .. Hi everyone. We just purchased a new home and I know it's too late to dig our pond this year, but we're not sure where to put it in the spring. The back is southern exposure, with a small slope 1/4 way into it and several trees including one very large Pine. Here is a pic of the back garden, any ideas on where is best? (The kiddy stuff is going as our son is 13.) Oh and the big vegetation to the left of the arbor that goes nowhere is the previous owners veggie garden which we'll be getting rid of. Ahh, placement. The precursor to how big? how deep? what kind of filter? The journey has begun...My thoughts, choose a spot: 1. That is currently pleasant to sit in. If you don't want to hang out there now, you won't hang out near the pond when it's there. 2. Can you get water to it easily? electricity? 3. Are there buried cables/pipes/roots in the area that may cause problems? 4. How level is the ground? Will it be a beyotch to dig a nice level hole there? If it's on a hill, how will you deal with run off? 5. Gently place a mirror on the ground, and sit near it. Does the "water" provide nice reflections? 6. Fall out. If you are near trees (not neccessiraly bad) you will be doing cleanup from the fallout. I chose a location under a line of pine trees on one side, and an oak on the other. It is a very natural, "nesteled" setting. The look is nice, but I am paying for that in cleanup work. 7. Borders. Pay attention to your borders. My pond (see #6) is nestled into some trees. I now have very little access to the rear side of my pond, or at least very little dry access. Oh, and it's off topic, but give yourself some shelves. I didn't. I build slopers...They suck. BV. |
#5
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You want it viewable from in the house or at least the back patio. You
want the pond itself off center (see Japanese garden design). You want it to take up the whole back yard (so you don't need to mess with the lawn, sprinklers, etc). Put in a walk way with lots of mystery. It's a 50x70 foot canvas. Your son is old enough that he doesn't care if there's no lawn in the back. Not sure where you live but if you do it right, put in a lot of xeriscape, then you won't have to mess with most of it unless you want to. Go for it. Steve and Lisa wrote: Hi everyone. We just purchased a new home and I know it's too late to dig our pond this year, but we're not sure where to put it in the spring. The back is southern exposure, with a small slope 1/4 way into it and several trees including one very large Pine. Here is a pic of the back garden, any ideas on where is best? (The kiddy stuff is going as our son is 13.) Oh and the big vegetation to the left of the arbor that goes nowhere is the previous owners veggie garden which we'll be getting rid of. http://www.britsintheus.com/backgarden.jpg Lisa |
#6
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I have mine in the front yard as the sea breeze is much better there
than in the back. I also fully decorate my pond and front yard every Christmas! Local media always shows up along with lines of cars trying to catch a glimpse of the fish along with the Christmas lights. jmo |
#7
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If I am looking at the picture correctly, the sloped section appears to be
fairly well sloped over a very narrow area. This would lend itself to the veggie filter flowing into a short stream into the pond with the veggie filter at the top of the slope and the pond at the bottom of the slope. Both areas, top and bottom appear to be reasonably level, so the edge of the pond would be nearly even around the perimeter. I would locate it as far away from the pine as possible. The leaves can be caught by netting, but needles just seem to orient themselves to go right through. -- RichToyBox http://www.geocities.com/richtoybox/pondintro.html "Steve and Lisa" wrote in message . .. Hi everyone. We just purchased a new home and I know it's too late to dig our pond this year, but we're not sure where to put it in the spring. The back is southern exposure, with a small slope 1/4 way into it and several trees including one very large Pine. Here is a pic of the back garden, any ideas on where is best? (The kiddy stuff is going as our son is 13.) Oh and the big vegetation to the left of the arbor that goes nowhere is the previous owners veggie garden which we'll be getting rid of. http://www.britsintheus.com/backgarden.jpg Lisa |
#8
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Actually, since their son is old enough to push a lawn mower, he might be
very happy that there's no mowable grass in the back... ;-) Mike D. "MattR" wrote in message ... You want it viewable from in the house or at least the back patio. You want the pond itself off center (see Japanese garden design). You want it to take up the whole back yard (so you don't need to mess with the lawn, sprinklers, etc). Put in a walk way with lots of mystery. It's a 50x70 foot canvas. Your son is old enough that he doesn't care if there's no lawn in the back. Not sure where you live but if you do it right, put in a lot of xeriscape, then you won't have to mess with most of it unless you want to. Go for it. Steve and Lisa wrote: Hi everyone. We just purchased a new home and I know it's too late to dig our pond this year, but we're not sure where to put it in the spring. The back is southern exposure, with a small slope 1/4 way into it and several trees including one very large Pine. Here is a pic of the back garden, any ideas on where is best? (The kiddy stuff is going as our son is 13.) Oh and the big vegetation to the left of the arbor that goes nowhere is the previous owners veggie garden which we'll be getting rid of. http://www.britsintheus.com/backgarden.jpg Lisa |
#9
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One thing that I see a lot of people mess up on with placement is that they
place it in some back corner somewhere. You should place it where you can see it all the time and from sitting on your porch. If you have one of those houses where you can see the back yard from the front door put it so you can see it (ie your outside, you open the front door and look in, and see through the house into the back yard) When you go to sell your house nothing will take the breath away from potential buyers than the front door view looking into a beautiful pond. "Steve and Lisa" wrote in message . .. Hi everyone. We just purchased a new home and I know it's too late to dig our pond this year, but we're not sure where to put it in the spring. The back is southern exposure, with a small slope 1/4 way into it and several trees including one very large Pine. Here is a pic of the back garden, any ideas on where is best? (The kiddy stuff is going as our son is 13.) Oh and the big vegetation to the left of the arbor that goes nowhere is the previous owners veggie garden which we'll be getting rid of. http://www.britsintheus.com/backgarden.jpg Lisa |
#10
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now is the PERFECT time to dig, line and landscape the pond, absolutely PERFECT. I
got friends put in ponds and they are busy, busy, busy this time of year in zone 5 right up until there is a couple feet of snow covering everything. Reason is, the ground is firm and dry. They are not sliding around in a lot of water like in spring. Transplanting is superb in fall, GRASS GROWS IN FALL, so after you are done putting in the pond and got it filled, you can do all your major landscaping like dragging in stones, putting in bulbs and big bushes or trees, etc. furthermore, plants are cheaper now than in spring. AND, by spring your pond will be properly aged!!!! It looks like you have a longer than wider lot. Break that up into "rooms" with the first room your pond. If you do 2 things, take more pictures including a shot of the back of the house and draw a sorta plot of where your house is, where your windows are and the plot of land all to scale, post that and people will help you design it. Oh what fun. Ingrid "Steve and Lisa" wrote: Hi everyone. We just purchased a new home and I know it's too late to dig our pond this year, but we're not sure where to put it in the spring. The back is southern exposure, with a small slope 1/4 way into it and several trees including one very large Pine. Here is a pic of the back garden, any ideas on where is best? (The kiddy stuff is going as our son is 13.) Oh and the big vegetation to the left of the arbor that goes nowhere is the previous owners veggie garden which we'll be getting rid of. http://www.britsintheus.com/backgarden.jpg Lisa ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
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