Calgary Pond – Introduction to a Garden Pond

July 30th, 2010 | by admin |

A magical fourth dimension comes to life in a garden that has water and this can be done with Calgary Pond. Splashes, musical chimes and fizzles – what you need to be captivated in your garden. And I’ll share some insights to you so you can start right.

A water pond can surely attract many types of species and wildlife. It can build a natural ecosystem, your garden becoming a haven for grasshoppers, bees and butterflies.

You can certainly revitalize the environ with a natural pond. The planet needs a helping hand with the onset of climate change. Old pond farms have dried up and a nature pond in a garden would be helpful.

1.Pond size

Determine the size of your pond. A little pond can be just as good as a large pond. Sprout can shoot even from a water feature made from waste liners, so don’t be restrained with the size.

Just create a garden pond that’s in proportion to the size of your lawn. A pond that’s too big would bestride a small garden while a pond too small would seem to be off course.

2.Choose your pond

It would be necessary to choose the type of pond that you need. This is important before you dig since it hard making anymore changes when you’ve already set the pond.

Find the style of pond that will synthesize with your garden. A natural pond would go well in a traditional garden, but not with a modern one.

3.The site of your pond

Don’t lay the pond just because there’s a vacant area in your garden. You don’t just settle a lagoon where your little ones would play Frisbee!

Situate a nice site where everyone can enjoy. Visualize the spot where you will place it.

4.Away from trees

When you build your nature pond, put them away from trees. The leaves of trees creates silt in the pond, and pretty soon this will turn into mud.

Another reason that a pond needs to be far from the trees you don’t need the shade. No sunlight stops aquatic plants from growing. Ideally, a nature pond needs hours of sunlight for photosynthesis.

5.Varied depths

Vary the depths of water in your pond. Include deeper areas and broad shallow waters.

Shallow water surfaces warms up faster which lets micro-algae grow as feeds for the tiny creatures. In the cold season, try to have water in the deep areas, this becomes a shelter for your pond inhabitants.

6.Create shelves and slopes

Create shelves to support the baskets of marginals and other aquatic plants. Make sure it is at least 6 to 12 inches below the water surface. Have some water lilies and oxygenating plants in deeper spots in your pond.

In addition, create gentle slopes at the water’s edge. This will allow aquatic creatures to access the other areas in the pond.

7.Modern pond liners

It would be okay for a pond to be made from clay, but I must tell you it’s not easy to keep it. Cracks continuously break out and it’s not easy to maintain.

You’d be better with a PVC or a butyl rubber, they are manufactured in rolls and can be folded to the pond’s shape. Keep it protected from sharp stones in the water.

8.Water pumps

You don’t need a rising jet type of fountain or a Neptune sculpture with a water pump. A small water pump is a good addition nonetheless for your pond.

The gentle water drift actually improves the water circulation in your lagoon and it increases the air exchange. An option you may like is a mini waterfall or a small river stream

Now that the marginals has bloomed, what’s your next action?

Just clean away the muck and smudges. It doesn’t need to be neat and preppy as your living room. You need to do this if you want your Calgary Pond to remain natural for years to come.

By any means, take care of the species when they took shelter at your pond!

For More : Koi pond filter

Written by:
Custom Stone and Waterscapes
3829 Parkhill Place Southwest, Calgary, AB T2S 2W6
(403)870-1142

Calgary Gardens, Calgary Ponds, Calgary Landscape, Calgary Landscape Design

Sorry, comments for this entry are closed at this time.