Tips For Setting Up A Garden Pond

Posted in Fish

Do you have a garden pond? Or would you like one? A garden pond or a water garden does not have to be big to totally change how you use your garden. The sound of running water is so soothing and a pond fountain or a waterfall can have a cooling effect on a hot summer’s day. Watching the fish carry out their daily lives is relaxing too and many gardeners like the opportunity to branch out into the new kingdom of aquatic plants.

If your pond is sunk into the earth, your could watch it from above or you could build it above ground and utilize perspex windows to watch your fish on their own level. Your fish will reproduce too, so you will have a new, perfect, ecosystem in your own garden.

Select the location of your pond with care. Try to put it on slightly higher ground, so that it is not flooded with all your garden’s rainwater in the course of heavy rains. Be wary of putting your pond under a tree or you will always be raking leaves out of the water, which is a real nuisance. Siting your pond in a place where it is in at least partial shade when the sun is high will also help reduce on algae growth.

However, once the contractor has created your pond and you have stocked it, is the time when your work begins. Perhaps not work, possibly you will take pleasure in maintaining your fish and your fish pond. This is not hard and a largish pond will need hardly any maintenance at all, most of it can be mechanized.

One of the first things that you will have to try to do is stop your garden falling into the pond. You do not want surrounding mud falling into the pond and literally muddying the water. This can be accomplished by lining your pond with a butyl pond liner and bringing the liner up over the lip of the pond by a foot or two.

Then you have to hold that in place. This can be done to suit your taste, but many people put a stone or brick walkway around the pond. If you let this overhang the pond by an inch or two, you will very nearly totally hide the pond liner.

The majority of people overfeed their fish, because fish outdoor will find a lot of natural food such as flies, larvae and grubs. This surplus food turns into a surplus of nutrients. This super-charged water is a perfect environment for algae, and algae is going to be your undying adversary. However, you can soak up some of these surplus nutrients with other plants that you like.

Aquatic plants such as lilies really make a pond and they will help aerate the water during the day when the water may be warmer (warm water holds less oxygen than cool water). Plants also offer your fish somewhere to take cover from predators and strong sunlight, which will reduce stress on your fish as well.

Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on many topics, but is now concerned with water garden pumps. If you are interested in a Solar Powered Pond Pump, please go to our web site now for a great deal.

Posted by Owen Jones   @   25 May 2010

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