Top 5 Mistakes When Building A Pond

Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль

In this video from Devon Pond Plants, David and Ruth look at the top 5 mistakes made when building a new pond. With the aid of two half-built ponds to help illustrate the points covered, they discuss topics such as pond site selection, materials used to build a pond, pond shelf space for pond plants, pond edge detail and ideal pond depth. While not intended as a complete guide to building a pond, this is essential viewing for anyone looking for advice on building a pond.
You can gain further information on the subjects covered in this video, and more pond plant advice and tips in David's new book: Ponds - A practical guide to design, construction and planting.
Visit: www.devonpondplants.co.uk to buy the book or to order pond plants in the UK.

Пікірлер: 44

  • @anthonyphotoman
    @anthonyphotoman3 ай бұрын

    Great advice, David and Ruth. thank you

  • @lucyt-c8092
    @lucyt-c80924 ай бұрын

    Very helpful- and well explained… thank you .

  • @atticbrowser9698
    @atticbrowser96985 ай бұрын

    Very helpful thanks!

  • @EmptyGlass99
    @EmptyGlass992 ай бұрын

    Great advice, thanks

  • @vijaysharmapc
    @vijaysharmapc2 ай бұрын

    Very insightful

  • @jamiemittermuller6470
    @jamiemittermuller6470Ай бұрын

    Looking forward to receiving my pond plant order. Watched this to check I’m on the right lines with what I’ve dug out so far, will probably double my shelve depth. I going to see if you have a video on doing a beach for a wildlife pond

  • @NobzLovesOutdoors
    @NobzLovesOutdoorsАй бұрын

    this is it, this is the video I have been looking forever for. You’ve answered my questions on how to hide the pond lining, how deep to go, how wide of a shelf to make. Many thanks good Sir! I will check out your book 😊 I feel so much more confident in my ability to start on my pond build

  • @DevonPondPlants

    @DevonPondPlants

    Ай бұрын

    You're very welcome, we are glad it was useful😎😎

  • @LeaDeborahHall
    @LeaDeborahHall10 күн бұрын

    This was the best video yet

  • @DevonPondPlants

    @DevonPondPlants

    9 күн бұрын

    Thank you, we are glad you're enjoying them! Plenty more in the pipeline.

  • @rosanadancel7225
    @rosanadancel72252 ай бұрын

    Very good explanation. How about swimming pond to explains? Thank you

  • @trudymiller582
    @trudymiller58223 күн бұрын

    I always leave a net over my pond year round . It really helps keep leaf debris out of the pond

  • @alexaccount8994
    @alexaccount89944 ай бұрын

    Oak leaves aren't toxic in a pond , leaf litter can be beneficial depending on the pond style you have gone for . Most toxic trees are ones related to pine or evergreen

  • @DevonPondPlants

    @DevonPondPlants

    3 ай бұрын

    Hi Alex, thank you for your comment, but this is not the full picture. While decomposition products such as high levels of tannins may or may not be toxic to plants or invertebrates, they can discolour the water, staining it a dark brown. This results in much reduced light levels at the bottom of the pond which will inhibit growth of bottom dwelling plants such as oxygenators and Nuphars. The blanketing effect of the leaves themselves also prevents light from reaching the foliage of these plants and can certainly kill them over the winter and Spring in the same way that ground cover membranes inhibit weeds. A small amount of leaf litter does produce extra habitat for some invertebrates but larger amounts are definitely harmful to any pond. Lastly, the decomposition of leaves reduces oxygen levels, encouraging the growth of anaerobic bacteria which themselves produce toxic compounds such as Hydrogen sulphide. A small amount of leaf litter and other plant debris does produce extra habitat for some invertebrates but larger amounts are definitely harmful to any pond. My advice has always been that for a healthy pond, levels of loose organic material in a garden pond should be kept to a minimum. This does not infer a hospital level of cleanliness though.

  • @RogersAB
    @RogersAB3 ай бұрын

    Is there any chance you guys could make a video. To show all types of oxygenator plants that you can just throw in the pond like hornwort etc.

  • @DevonPondPlants

    @DevonPondPlants

    3 ай бұрын

    Hi Anthony. That would be a very short video, just hornwort and possibly Callitriche. All the rest have true roots and need to be growing in something. You wouldn't go to the garden centre to buy roses and lupins and then just chuck them in the garden when you got home!

  • @RogersAB

    @RogersAB

    3 ай бұрын

    @@DevonPondPlants I wish i'd watched some videos or even your videos of what not to do when building a pond. I've used a liner and also did not add any shelves for the plants to sit on. Are there any potted plants that would like a pot deep in the water. Pond is about 2ft deep. I'm not into stealing amphibians from the wild (disease etc) but I am hoping to eventually attract them.

  • @DevonPondPlants

    @DevonPondPlants

    3 ай бұрын

    only lilies, oxygenators and deep water plants. Check website info pages and blogs for lots more info.@@RogersAB

  • @Reuben17505
    @Reuben17505Ай бұрын

    You mention that deep subsoil would be unsuitable to line a pond with and plant into. I have been following Joel Ashton’s videos where he uses subsoil exclusively to cover the entire pond. The point of this I thought was that it’s low in nutrients, and heavier than topsoil so won’t feed algae and resists floating around as much. On my allotment the topsoil is reasonably shallow, less than a foot in a lot of places. The subsoil is light brown/orange, heavy clay with flint. Would it be better to use aquatic soil or even puddling clay though?

  • @DevonPondPlants

    @DevonPondPlants

    28 күн бұрын

    It's a matter of opinion really. What I said is that the yellow clay layer is unsuitable, but the lighter subsoil just below the topsoil is ok. It's always a compromise between unwanted dissolved nutrients in the water and insufficient nutrients for the plants.

  • @MrJmhess77
    @MrJmhess7717 күн бұрын

    I love your dog! What breed is he/she?

  • @DevonPondPlants

    @DevonPondPlants

    17 күн бұрын

    He's a Lagotto Romagnolo! Not available mail order 😆😆

  • @MrJmhess77

    @MrJmhess77

    17 күн бұрын

    @@DevonPondPlants He is beautiful. He looks so FLUFFY!!!

  • @richardcottone6620
    @richardcottone66203 күн бұрын

    what about a concrete pond

  • @DevonPondPlants

    @DevonPondPlants

    2 күн бұрын

    All the same comments apply. You can read more about concrete ponds in my book😉😉

  • @Alan-ul9sz
    @Alan-ul9sz3 ай бұрын

    Good clear video David thanks, although I have to agree with Jeremy below regarding metric measurements - I wish you would talk in feet, inches and gallons

  • @discernment777
    @discernment7773 ай бұрын

    No plastics anymore. We need to relearn how to do it without synthetics.

  • @erwinbrubacker7488
    @erwinbrubacker7488Ай бұрын

    Baby pool.

  • @jeremywilkinson2111
    @jeremywilkinson21114 ай бұрын

    Well thought out and presented video. Just very sad that you feel obliged to talk in centimetres all the time. The more that media outlets and people express everything in metric, the quicker we lose our British heritage and identity

  • @DevonPondPlants

    @DevonPondPlants

    4 ай бұрын

    Hello Jeremy, thank you for your kind comment. Like you, I am a dinosaur and think in Imperial terms, but most of our customers now have no idea what an inch or a gallon is and so we move with the times.

  • @jeremywilkinson2111

    @jeremywilkinson2111

    4 ай бұрын

    I am sure there are very few people who don't know what an inch is and nearly all will still think in their own minds in inches rather than centimetres. You are not a dinosaur at all; unfortunately most other people who, like your goodself, reach out to thousands via screen, radio or print think the same as you ie) "I'll have to talk in metric now" - but you don't ! Its precisely that approach which is destroying what little remains of our national identity and heritage. In my town all our grocers and 2 butchers sell in pounds rather than kg for that reason. Metrication was halted in 2007. In your next well crafted video please consider using British measurements. Best wishes

  • @andrewthompson5745

    @andrewthompson5745

    4 ай бұрын

    Jeremy, we don't use barleycorns, pecks, gills, firkins, fluid scruples, and many other units either but these are all imperial measurements! Do you bemoan their passing? I'm in my 60s and apart from a pint of bitter, miles to travel, and being 6 foot tall I think in terms of metric measurements entirely. NB Parliament passed the Weights and Measures (Metric System) Act, legalising metric units for all purposes (but not making them compulsory) in 1896.

  • @discernment777

    @discernment777

    3 ай бұрын

    ... Like using plastic for everything. Sad

  • @lala_land86

    @lala_land86

    3 ай бұрын

    Your comment just proves that you are not willing to grasp the use of metric and as such, just refusing to use it.. Even though in most cases it's much simpler and accurate to read than using fractions. Americans use imperial, and therfore most sewing patterns i have used are also in inches, which for sewing is much much simpler, but when you need it for construction for example, metric is much better and accurate. It has absolutely zero to do with loosing British heritage, and there's much bigger problems going on in this country than using a type of measurement that was passed over 120 years ago because someone also realised it was better than imperial 🙄

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