Friday 11 February 2011

My Wildlife Pond – A Tale of Trial and Error

I have always wanted a wildlife pond in my garden but I decided not to do anything about it until the children were old enough to be safe around water.  About seven years ago I finally took the plunge.  I decided to dig it myself, in the part of the garden that used to be my vegetable patch.  I had suffered a crisis of conscience about slug pellets a few years earlier and, despite trying every conceivable organic deterrent, had not been able to grow anything since!

I read a few books, marked out the outline of the pond, chose a liner, and began to dig.  Very quickly things began to take shape.  I enlisted my husband’s help to put in the liner and the whole family joined in as we filled it with water.  It had a deep patch in the middle, a muddy area for planting, ledges of various depths, a pebble beach, a turf bank on one side and slates around the other.

Mistake number one – I should have cemented the slates in, but I thought they would look more natural set in earth.  I have regretted this ever since as they have never looked right, but it is very hard to rectify once the pond has things living in it because if cement goes into the water it will kill everything.

I thought very carefully about planting and decided only to use natives.  Then my neighbour offered me a bucket of pond water and some of her plants to get things started – I found myself smiling and saying ‘yes please’.  Mistake number two.  One very pretty plant turned out to be a water primrose, which is an invasive alien, and a few days afterwards I noticed a tiny translucent fish swimming at the edge of the pond.  They oxygenators were full of goldfish fry!  I managed to get rid of the water primrose before it got established, but the goldfish were another matter! I gave away dozens as they grew up but the last one or two became very big, ate anything that moved, and defied all my attempts to catch them.  The last one disappeared a year ago so we are finally fish free – I am hoping that now my tadpoles stand a chance!

My last big mistake was to plant a native white water lily – I was warned that it would grow very big but did I listen?  Last summer it finally filled the whole pond so I took advantage of the early drought and low water levels to wrestle it out.  It felt like doing battle with a triffid! 

I finally have a fish free, water lily free, pond and the frogs have returned despite the hard winter.  I’m hoping that I have finally learned from my mistakes and that anyone reading this will learn from them too.

Disasters aside, my pond has giving me a great deal of pleasure over the years and it has brought some wonderful wildlife to my garden.  I’ll let the pictures speak for themselves...




 





3 comments:

  1. Lovely blog.. the photos of your garden wildlife are lovely. hope you find time to continue this lovely blog.

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  2. Your pond is gorgeous, it's just what I want but according to hubby who knows about these things our water table is too high and would push the liner up. So I make do with a yukky preformed thing but at least its a puddle in the garden for things to drink from!

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