Rains hurting your pond?

Kingston, OK(Zone 7a)

The rains have caused me to rethink my pond.
Later I am thinking of pouring a concrete foundation around the pond to rest my rocks on.

Thumbnail by TARogers5
Granbury, TX(Zone 7b)

We've had some stones slip into the pond also. Not as bad as I thought it might be considering the pond was under about 6 feet of water. If you look at the waterfall on the right, the water got within a foot of the top at it's highest.

Thumbnail by sugarfoot
Kingston, OK(Zone 7a)

Now that is a big pond now. LOL
Sorry for all the damage.

Ocoee (W. Orlando), FL(Zone 9b)

Oh goodness! And here I am trying to use my hose and fill my ponds a little everyday just to keep the water temp down for the fish....Mid to high 90's over and over, with no rain in sight. The boat is stuck in the sand high and dry. Wanna share some DG-Water with the rest of us who for some reason have not gotten any this year? :)

Granbury, TX(Zone 7b)

MerryMary,
I think that if less advanced people could build the pyramids and the Great Wall of China that we could devise and aquaduct system that would allow us to move water around in the country from places that are flooding to places that are drought stricken. Would be costly, yes, but think of all the money we spend on disaster relief that we could save over time. Anyway, I'd just love to share some water with you. I'll go outside and see if I can huff these rain clouds in an easterly direction.

Ocoee (W. Orlando), FL(Zone 9b)

My theory exactly! I've been promoting the "Alaskan Pipeline" but with water idea for years, but only gardeners think it's a worthwhile proposition!
:)

Post a Reply to this Thread

Please or sign up to post.
BACK TO TOP