Sunday, June 16, 2019

Tips For Installing A Pondless Waterfall Kit

By Ronald Patterson


Beautify landscaping can take many different forms in order to take a rather plain looking yard and turn it into something spectacular. A popular way is to install some sort of water display. With a pondless waterfall kit, you can do just that. Built correctly, you end up with a natural looking fall and stream that recycles the water for continuous pleasure.

The beginning of the project requires mapping out how you want it to look and marking the yard. Once you have your plan, use bright spray paint to mark the areas that you need to dig. You will need to map out where the reservoir, or bottom, of the display will be, including where the pump will go.

When you dig, there are several things that need to be done just right. First, the reservoir needs to sit below the stream path. You will want to dig 18 to 24 inches deep and in a large square or circle. Then you will need to dig a deeper hole to place the pump vault. This needs to be the lowest point of the reservoir in order for all the water to be recirculated. Save the dirt to use for fill and covering the pipe and lining.

Using rubber liner, you will protect the ground where the water will flow. You want to cover the entire reservoir and where the stream will be. Once this is covered, place the vault in the hole. Using more than one layer of the liner will be helpful in protecting it from getting poked by the rocks and keeping the water from draining out into the yard.

The flexible tubing needs to be attached to the pump and run uphill to the place where the spillway will be installed. At this point, you can simply lay it on the ground. You should have enough dirt from digging that you will not need to dig a trench to cover the tubing.

You need to use large gravel to fill in the reservoir and then larger rocks to begin building the stream. These will be placed in various intervals along the rubber liner. The entire stream and system should be on top of the liner so you don't lose the water along the way. It will also keep the yard from being washed out. You are basically building a self-contained system.

The larger boulders can be used in various points to create additional spillways and paths. When these are in place, begin filling in areas with different types of rocks and gravel for decorative purposes and to create a natural stream. Before you're done, run water through the system to see where the water path will go and adjust the rocks and liner as needed.

After everything is in place, continue filling in the stream with the rocks and cover the liner and tubing with the extra dirt. Several inches of dirt should be used to allow you to plant things along the path. Other items can be placed to help make it look more natural.




About the Author:



No comments:

Post a Comment