When ever I saw them, I tossed them gently into our neighbours garden pond hoping that I'd caught the vast majority and given them a second chance. Imagine my surprise when, upon doing some tidying during the heat wave in May, I found a small dog bowl (left our from last summer) pushed back into the corner... containing frog spawn, a very tiny amount of water and a female frog looking a lot less wet than it should be. Evidently this poor girl was one I'd missed, but she'd tried to make the best of bad situation. I quickly tossed it into the neighbours pond and dunked the frog spawn, dog bowl and all into an old fish tank which I filled with rain water. Sadly, I must have found the frog spawn a little too late as the little black dots polarised, much to my dismay...
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Shortly after digging and filling the pond. |
A couple of months later we've now purchased a second hand preformed plastic liner, a waterfall feature and a pump for £80, dug the hole, fitted the pond, and filled it with rain water.
I found my first frog in it yesterday whilst positioning the waterfall feature, and I've already counted two species of damselfly (over 10 separate pairs of large red, and a couple of blue tailed), I've also found a nymphs casing left on a rock by the side of the pond (must have been amongst the pond vegetation that my neighbour donated).
Rather than filling the gap underneath the water fall with solid soil, after putting the supporting rocks around the edge, we have in filled the space underneath with some of last years left over firewood logs and some of the turf and soil we removed from the border of the pond. Hopefully amphibians and bugs and beasties can have a kind of cubby hole to hide in.
Now it's almost finished, we only have some cobbles and plants to place and a bog garden to excavate on the left hand side of the waterfall... What do you think so far?
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We finalised the water fall placement. |
Rather than filling the gap underneath the water fall with solid soil, after putting the supporting rocks around the edge, we have in filled the space underneath with some of last years left over firewood logs and some of the turf and soil we removed from the border of the pond. Hopefully amphibians and bugs and beasties can have a kind of cubby hole to hide in.
Now it's almost finished, we only have some cobbles and plants to place and a bog garden to excavate on the left hand side of the waterfall... What do you think so far?
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