Well, on a smaller – MUCH smaller – scale…
The Flâneur Husband asked me for a wish list for the garden when he was here last weekend, and of course the wish list included a new spade (the old one is coming apart at the rivets), a new hoe (I don’t know the English name for this type of hoe, but we only have on kind of hoe at present and that’s clearly not enough), a compost grinder (taking branches up to 40mm), some other tid-bits and this:
Why, yes! It’s a black plastic tub! It’s about a foot deep, 1½ft wide and 2½ft long! In other words it’s a miniature pond in the making… One end will need to be filled up with stones and tiles so animals that fall into it will have a place to crawl out out the water, of course, and I’m hoping that if I dig the hole deep enough I can have the soil sloping down to the tub’s edge, making it more easily disguise-able by plants.
I’m as thrilled as, well… As a gardener with a black plastic tub! Time will tell whether I manage to turn this into a miniature pond or whether it will turn into a slimy green bog of algae, but I feel confident that if I start with a visit to the local aquarium shop and get some oxygenating plants going from the start, the problems can be kept at a minimum.
It will go somewhere in the corner down by the hedgerow where it can be seen from the house but also gets some shade and provides easy escape routes for animals. After all, animals are the main reason I want a small miniature pond/puddle; I especially hope that over time it will increase the number of frogs and toads in our garden, but of course the birds will be welcome as well.
I’m terribly excited about this. project, but of course – inevitably – it involves more digging… So I need to site the mini pond far enough from the trees that at least I won’t have to get tangled up in tree roots, and also it needs to somehow fit into the overall scheme for the Ambitious Border, since it will be at the very end of the stretch of the border that has not yet been created.
I also have 5 Blue Rhapsody roses that are in a “holding pen” in the courtyard and need to be moved out into the garden, so it’s a good thing I have a long weekend coming; Ascension Day (Thursday) is a day off here in Denmark, and financial institutions (such as the place I go to when I take time off gardening, i.e. my job) are also closed on Friday. Good thing the forecast looks promising! (Degrees in Celsius)




Oh a pond is so much fun…I wish you great success with it…you will have fun planing it, digging it and then planting around it…when the critters come it is finished and the fun begins
I can’t wait! It will all be delivered on Friday, so I will have toys galore to play with this weekend!
The biggest challenge is that I will have to make sure the planting looks lush and “wild” from the first year so it doesn’t look like a plastic tub with water, but rather a small watering hole…
Wahoo! A pond! Ponds are so much fun, although yes, sometimes they are just big blobs of algae. Still fun, though! Good luck with yours, and have fun digging on your long weekend!
My pond will be so small that IF it becomes infested with algae I can easily get it all out – or change the water entirely. Mind you, I’ve ordered some fully hardy water plants online, so they will be delivered some time next week and should help prevent a build-up of nutrients – and resulting algae – in the pond.
But water is inherently fun, and I really look forward to the moment when I begin filling it with water…
A miniature pond in the making. That’s a smart way to get your feet wet! (sorry bad joke) It is a great idea and I wish you much success and perhaps many more miniature ponds.
It’ll be so much fun to make, and I hope the wildlife will enjoy it… I can’t wait for the delivery tomorrow!