View Single Post
  #2   Report Post  
Old 17-02-2008, 05:47 PM posted to rec.ponds.moderated
[email protected] dr-solo@wi.rr.com is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Mar 2007
Posts: 1,004
Default Pond question -- suggestions for hiding top of liner

http://weloveteaching.com/mypond/etc/lineredge.gif

it sounds like your pond is rather formal. I solved this problem by using wood
(cedar altho cypress is even better) to build a veggie filter over the pond where the
liner would be seen. http://weloveteaching.com/mypond/2000/p2000.htm
however, is use the edge of the wood as an indicator of when to fill the pond too.

at one time I used netting to hold plants along the front edge (first picture)
http://weloveteaching.com/mypond/changes/changes.htm
but I removed it when the plants just grew too large and/or too scraggly and blocked
my view of the fish. the fish ate the roots of the plants. if they can get to them,
they will. in a well filtered pond there isnt such an abundance of nitrogen that
water plants will grow lushly enough to overcome nibbling. which is why I have
filters they cannot get into. Ingrid

On Sun, 17 Feb 2008 08:48:53 CST, wrote:
We have a circular pond around 12' in diameter.The rim is paved, but
the slabs don't quite extend over the edge of the pond, leaving a
strip of pond liner exposed. Depending on how much/little rain we
have, this strip ranges from a couple of inches to about a foot above
the level of the water.

We want to cover up this strip, partly because it's unsightly, and
partly because of the apparent problems caused by excessive sunlight
on liners. But we aren't sure how best to do this. It would be nice to
be able to smear the liner with some sort of natural-looking clay but
I don't know of anything that would stick permanently (it's a fairly
perpendicular angle), and wouldn't just crumble into the water as the
level rose. Next thought is edging plants but we can't get these
anywhere near dense enough. So we thought about attaching some sort of
webbing around this exposed strip and growing some plants that would
grow through the netting and become a thickish barrier between the
sunlight and the liner. These could be planted either submerged at the
pond edge, or planted above, and let to trail downwards and grow
around the netting.

Is there a better idea than this, and are there any suggestions for
which plants would happily thread their way through netting like this,
and wouldn't mind being dunked in pond water?

We are in the UK, which may affect availability of plants.

Thanks in advance

Will