Land of 10,001 lakes
This house has a fish pond in the back yard. It’s a little pond; big enough for some gold fish and a fountain in the middle. Stacy liked the pond, especially the sound of the water with the fountain on. But, she decided early on that she really wanted to add another pond, with a waterfall connecting the two.
Last week, she did it, with the help of some strong teenage backs and arms. Matthew and Nathan dug a large hole (Justin was still in the Boundary Waters), large enough to fit a ~200 gallon horse watering tank that we brought from our old farm, plus additional room.
After a week of digging two hours/day, they finished the three foot deep hole. They moved some of the dirt around the house to spots that needed it in the lawn, but also built up the slope away from the foundation along the side of the house. They worked hard!
Once the hole was in place, Stacy got to work. She and Justin back-filled around the horse tank and finished getting the ground around the pond to the appropriate height. The tank and dirt were then covered with a plastic liner, and the site was now ready for rocks. Stacy used the edge of the tank as a ledge to put rocks around the new pond, and built an upper waterfall that drained down into the upper pond. Also, she created a gap where the upper pond flows into the lower pond.
Stacy started to fill the pool with water, and also hooked up the pump and filter system to the upper water fall that runs into the new pool. She spent lots of time arranging the rocks so that they are stable, functional, and attractive. At the upper falls, she used a large piece of slate that Stacy’s parents had brought from their home in Vermont. A beautiful piece to use as the center of the falls!
Stacy spent much of the day arranging rocks that she pulled out of the bottom of the old pond. Luckily, there were lots of them! Unfortunately, there were also several inches of muck on the bottom of the old pond from years of decayed tree debris and fish poop. So, she drained most of the water from the lower pool and moved the fish to the upper pool. She scooped all of the muck out and fed it to the plants in the yard. Yum! Smelly, but good for them.
Stacy took a short video of the nearly-completed upper falls in action.
To finish it off, Stacy purchased a few rocks. As the centerpiece of the lower falls, she used Bighorn flag stone with beautiful colors from Montana. She also found some rocks with lots of moss and lichen to make the ponds look a little more natural and aged.
So, it’s just about complete. Stacy got close, but ran out of rocks. It’s time to go visit our 14 acres of fields in Wisconsin. There are LOTS of rocks there. Here’s a shot of the nearly finished project. Beautiful!







