Making the ideal decorative duck pond
First published in the IRDA Yearbook 2003
See the article with Elizabeth's pictures at
http://www.basilisk.co.uk/runnerducks/pond.html
The dominating feature of our garden is the 25’ diameter pond which
we excavated just after we moved in. Our house adjoins some old
gravel-pits, now a private lake with a wonderful range of wildlife
and rare wildfowl. The original purpose of the pond was to lure
wildlife from the gravel pits into the garden, a plan that met with
rapid success; before long dragonflies, grass snakes and kingfishers
were taking a dip freely within view of the back door.
And then came the ducks! Although I didn’t design the pond with them
in mind, I found I had created a good duck pond, one which seems to
have stood up to their attempts to destroy it fairly well. However a
number of neighbours have given up on duck keeping because they
wrecked the garden pond, so it’s worth considering some of the
problems.
Materials
Don’t try to cut corners on materials, buy the best. Engineering a
pond is a lot of hard work, and once completed you want it to last.
We used very heavy duty polythene land-fill liner, which claims to
be resistant to willow roots (so far so good!). Although butyl is
good, I would be afraid it wouldn’t be robust enough to cope with
roots or erosion from claws over time.
We also protected the edges with felted pond underlay before burying
them under several inches of riddled soil/gravel for added
protection from erosion/UV damage, and for a natural appearance.
Size and volume
Many people make the mistake of making their ponds too small and
shallow. Small ponds contain a relatively small volume of water,
which is prone to more fluctuations of temperature and biochemistry
than a larger one. This results in a rise in temperature/salts that
favour the growth of algae, blanketweed and possibly poisonous
anaerobic bacteria.
Adding sufficient quantity of oxygenating plants (such as Elodea
crispa, (Canadian pondweed) will help stabilize the situation, but
not as much as allowing for a larger volume which will react to
temperature changes much slower. Ours is 4’ at it’s deepest point. I
wouldn’t even consider making one less than 10’ or 12’ across and
24" deep. If they pond is large enough you won’t need pumps, filters
or bottles of algicide!
Plants
Firstly patience helps. If you allow the plants to get firmly
established before acquiring/letting the ducks loose, they will
stand a much better chance of survival. Most will form large mats
within a season, which as if like they’ve been there a lifetime!
Although most waterplants are on the robust side those with floating
leaves (waterlillies, frogbit etc) just can’t cope with a duck
battering. Many pond marginals are real thugs of the horticultural
world, which makes them very well matched to the efforts of ducks.
Most burst into vigorous growth within a short period in mid-May.
Keep the birds in their runs for a few days and they’ll be faced
with an virtually indestructable jungle when they return.
