Small Pond – With Preformed ponds or pond liners
Posts tagged pond
Water Lily for Small Pond
Jun 28th
Here’s a video of a lovely pink and white water lily suitable for a small pond.
The centre is golden and the leaves or lily pads are quite large but don’t tend to overcrowd the small pond with a little maintenance.
The variety of water lily is essential to determine before planting, and this one is probably Nymphaea “Amabilis”
The Small Pond in Dry Weather
Jun 22nd
Yesterday I topped up my small pond with a hosepipe, something I prefer not to do if I can avoid it. In warm dry weather the rate of evaporation from the surface of the pond and especially from the leaves of all the plants growing out of the pond, can be quite high. When the water level has dropped a few inches its best to hold out for rain rather than top up with fresh water straight away, but eventually there comes a point where plants such as water lillys are affected and also the total volume of free water for the animals in the small pond becomes restrictive. So out comes the garden hose with a good sprinkler attachment and I fill it up slowly, right to the brim. I also fill up theĀ empty rain butt to half full, not expecting any rainfall in the next few days, to make it easierĀ to fill watering cans and if the dry warm weather continues, I’ll tip that into the pond as well.
Ideally there would be such a large reservoir of rainwater collected from a big roof area into huge storage containers that tap water would never be necessary, but that isn’t practical with the setup I have here at the moment. Rainwater is generally preferable to tap water because the tap water contains a background level of nitrate which is not good for the animal and small insect life in the pond, also the PH of tap water is treated to be less corrosive to pipework whereas the pond life is happier, I think, with the slightly more acidic rainwater.
Not only that but also tap water has been expensively treated to make it suitable as drinking water for humans. Its really a waste to use it for other purposes unless absolutely necessary.
Another way to cut down on the need to top up any small pond is to cut back the vegetation somewhat. Water irises once they have flowered can be taken right back to near the surface level, although then you will miss out on the spectacular seed heads.
Large Lily Root Small Pond Problem
Jun 7th
Hi all
I have had a lily root or tuber, whatever its correct name which I originally bought in a fish pond supplies section of the local mega-garden centre. It’s in a basket in my small pond, but the fiish have disturbed it badly, so I have pulled it out.
The problem is that the lily tuber is too long for the small basket in my garden pond.
It is also showing signs of shooting, so worth hangimg on to I would have thought.
The question is, can I just cut it in half and put half in each of 2 baskets say in
aquatic on even multi purpose compost with a stone to hold it in place
Its so many years since I first put it in I can’t remember what I did
Answer:
Yeah, chop in half and replant any bits that have shoots. Dont use MP compost, a heavy soil is best, or buy some proper aquatic compost form the fish pond supplies shop or garden centre.
Green Eggs in my small pond
Jun 6th
These green eggs were laid by something as yet unidentified on a water iris leaf sticking out vertically from the shallow end of my small pond.
Small Pond Giant Tadpole
Jun 6th
Giant Tadpole in a Small Pond
Even the smallest of ponds can support a batch of tadpoles, but its another thing how many of them will survive in the small environment to reach the stage where they successfully crawl out of the pond as frogs or toads. If you look carefully at the developing tadpoles, you will often notice that some grow more quickly than others, and certainly the metamorphosis will take place as an even spread of many weeks. There’s also a chance of spotting the odd giant tadole in a garden pond, way bigger than the usual small ones, as the following discussion explained:
kingcutgroover1 says:We found this giant tadpole in the pond. Shown with regular tadpoles and 50p piece for scale. Any ideas? |
Cosper Wosper says:I had some ‘giant’ tadpoles in my pond a few years back, they turned into ordinary frogs. It seems that some years some tadpoles don’t finish ‘cooking’ and these ‘par-boiled’ ones ( wheather permitting ) sit around on the bottom of the pond, they seem to get a good head start the next year, I think its just natures way of spreading the load. |
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the longhairedgit
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Mike_Foster
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Cosper Wosper says:That may be so, but I drain and clean my before the frogs spawn so as not to loose any. Its then that they come up in the net, sometimes with and sometimes without legs. Most tadpoles are omnivours and are happy munching on dead worms and slugs that have fallen in, I’ve netted a dead goldfish out before and found tadies sucking away at the flesh… which is nice. :@) |
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the longhairedgit
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dean_area51 says:It wasn’t that long ago that you could buy ‘giant’ tadpoles in garden centres. These turned out to be American bullfrogs and I knew someone who released them into their garden pond. Although your giant doesn’t actually look as big as the bullfrog tadpoles which were the size of my thumb. |
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steb1
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Cosper Wosper says:Good point Stephen. Steb1 are you any good with caterpillars (or at least better than I’m with Pipits)? I will post it in the ID thread. |
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Mike_Foster
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the longhairedgit
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