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POND CONSTRUCTION TIPS (Pond Guru – Newcastle, North East England)

Posted by admin on Jan 16, 2010

www.pondguru.co.uk POND CONSTRUCTION TIPS AND EXAMPLE OF BUILD. AQUATIC LANDSCAPING SPECIALIST WITH MANY YEARS EXPERIENCE BUILDING WILDLIFE AND FISH PONDS IN THE NORTH EAST OF ENGLAND. DECKING INSTALLATION AND FENCING PROJECTS ALSO UNDERTAKEN. PLEASE CONTACT FOR ADVICE OR A QUOTE.

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25 Comments »

Arteolike:

Alright, were can i but it? Is it expensive? Because some maniac invented these things and their 1/2 the price of the liner! For my 15′ x 20′ pond i need to spend $89.00USD and for my stream $35.00USD! Enough i paid $165.00USD For a 15′ x 20′ piece of rubber, now they are expecting me to pay $89.00USD For a piece for worthless fabric! My Grandpa Built a pond 29 Years ago (Still remember it in my child hood) with regular roofing ribber and carpet underlayment! And its full of fish and plants!

June 12th, 2009 | 9:37 am
pondguru:

Carpet underlay is the next best thing to ‘proper’ underlay. I always use the polyester underlay as it can be easily pegged down, follows shelf contours well and will not rot. If you can get carpet underlay its not a bad second choice. the polyester underlay is probably the same as I use as it is about 1/2 the cost of 1mm rubber. Take the entire cost of the job (liner, pump, filter, electrics etc.) into account before leaving out underlay, it doesn’t add much to the bottom line cost.

June 12th, 2009 | 2:38 pm
pondguru:

When I am pricing to install a pond or stream, if the client wants to do without underlay then I turn down the job if I can’t talk them round – I think its that important.

June 12th, 2009 | 2:41 pm
howarth004:

Good video you have put together there and some well designed ponds, with usefull information

June 20th, 2009 | 9:34 am
pondguru:

I still intend to do videos with detailed construction of cascades and filter installation, but never seem to get round to it….

June 20th, 2009 | 12:17 pm
HeroDarren1993:

How deep i need for a turtle pond? What other requirements is needed?

August 1st, 2009 | 1:55 am
pondguru:

I don’t know where you live so all I can do is advise based on my pond. Mine is about 12′-15′ deep and 100′ long by 50′ wide but I live in North East England and the weather gets very cold, freezing the top of the pond. This forces the terrapins to hibernate which is not ideal for them. If you live in an area that gets no frost then the pond would need to be no bigger than approx. 10′ x 8′ x 3′ deep with basking sites (important). You would obviously need to feed them also in a smaller pond.

August 1st, 2009 | 8:57 am
HeroDarren1993:

I live in Malaysia and possibly coldest temperatue would be 25*C. 10′ x 8′ 3′ with a hibernating site eh? Do you have a video of your own turtle pond? I would like to see how it look like.

August 1st, 2009 | 4:44 pm
rcooper95:

look at the pond on my homepage and ask questions there

August 1st, 2009 | 9:49 pm
pondguru:

Ha, Ha. No need for any hibernation site then! My own pond is down in my videos as ‘Pondguru – natural koi pond’ but it crops up on a few of my videos including this one and ‘Pondguru’s garden’.

August 2nd, 2009 | 12:14 am
raywoolshy:

1:02 wots that

September 14th, 2009 | 1:12 pm
pondguru:

A sturgeon of some sort. Not sure which type – may be white tip. It’s difficult to tell from underneath and the picture was one I got off internet image search.

September 14th, 2009 | 3:16 pm
BigBadCrazyDave:

Pondguru – I need a bit of advice… I’m about to build a 4000 gallon pond and was hoping to have a few koi. I was only planning on getting a good quality pump, chest filter, and air pump, but i’ve seen koi specific filters that cost hundreds. Would my original plan be sufficient?

September 26th, 2009 | 4:28 am
pondguru:

As long as you add some plants and not too many koi, the filter shouldn’t get overworked. By chest filter I assume you mean the traditional box filter. This is the most cost effective way to get maximum filtration at minimum cost. If the filter comes with flocor (chopped up bits of corrugated pipe) you could substitute that for alfagrog which will increase the surface area / efficiency of the filter. Putting an air stone into the filter will feed the bacteria with more oxygen also.

September 27th, 2009 | 12:46 am
BigBadCrazyDave:

Brilliant, thanks for the advice. I’ve decided to splash out a bit more and go for a higher spec box filter, but i’ll still check out some alfagrog. I was originally going to run 2 air lines into the pond, but i’ll use one in the filter now!
Thanks again for the advice.

September 27th, 2009 | 3:42 am
pondguru:

No worries, man.

September 27th, 2009 | 4:16 am
Arteolike:

1mm Liner? i thought 45 Mil EPDM was the best bet?

November 14th, 2009 | 11:12 pm
pondguru:

45 mil ? as in 45 milimetres? I have not come across that one. Each liner has its own benefits when thickness, cost ease of use are taken into consideration. The 1mm rubber suits the type of ponds that I build best but some people use nothing but 0.7mm butyl as it lays easier and some folks always use 0.5 PVC to keep costs down (not advised)

November 15th, 2009 | 12:49 am
Arteolike:

no no 45 Mil as in 45/1000 or something like that. Look around. Almost every pond installer uses 45 mil EPDM pond liner, typically from Firestone. I got mine from Anjon, with a lifetime warranty.

November 15th, 2009 | 2:22 pm
pondguru:

Thats probably the trade name for it in the US. Here its called Firestone 1mm EPDM. I’m sure that its the same stuff as thats what I see the likes of ‘Pond digger’, ‘Pond hunter’ and ‘LA Fish Guys’ using on their Youtube videos.

November 16th, 2009 | 12:32 am
Arteolike:

It is! But i think “The Pond Hunter” and “The Pond Digger” use a higher quality liner than “LA Fish Guys” See… Firestone pond liners don’t consist of an even thickness, for that they are known known as 40Mil pond liners here in the US. Firestone offers a 20 year warranty, But i like anjon, they got a Life Tome warrenty, you should ckek them out.

November 16th, 2009 | 9:10 am
pondguru:

Yeah, I don’t know about the LA fish guys for sure, I normally can’t get through their videos as they do them in so many parts!
The Firestone that I use has a ‘Lifetime warranty’ which relates to how quickly the material breaks down in sunlight. As it has only been manufactured for about 50 years and the first batch still hasn’t degraded enough to leak, that’ll do for me.

November 16th, 2009 | 9:19 am
Arteolike:

Cool. And the “LA Fish Guys” are so annoying, kinda. HE talks like he is bored and he knows everything. There 500 Part shows would get twice as fast if he talked with passion and straight forward.

November 16th, 2009 | 9:28 am
pondguru:

My videos are probably the opposite to LA fish guys as they are very straightforward and functional. Problem is I do so many jobs that if I go into too much detail I would never get through the work. I maybe should get in front of the camera a bit and explain a bit more to make the vids bit more interesting but when I’m on a job I just concentrate on doing it to the best of my ability, then on to the next one without having time to edit an epic 20 part series on a simple pond build.

November 16th, 2009 | 11:33 am
ThePondDigger:

Hey Arteolike, Pondguru is in Europe so we are using different measurements for identifying thickness of liner. I’m sure he is using the same quality pond liner as we are here in the US. I look forward to the day I can work on the same project as PondGURU. Our styles are very different but the same, if that makes any sense. We would have a good time trading construction tips and tricks!

December 27th, 2009 | 8:49 am
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