Articles related to "Water Garden Ponds"Short on space? Or maybe you simply want to add a patio water feature instead of building a huge pond. This container water garden adds drama to your deck.
Having a healthy pond assures a healthy start for the fish you add to it. Fish will thrive with little care if proper set up is done before they are brought home.
No pond is complete without the Louisiana Iris! This statuesque plant is a must for every water garden. I'll tell you why.
Is your pond only a foot deep? Or do you have a shallow area you just don't know what to do with? I'll show you why yellow water snowflakes just might fit the bill.
The cattail is an excellent choice for the water garden. It is a hardy, useful food plant with beautiful foliage.
A spicy scented shrub that makes for interesting stories, the Spicebush is also good for a water garden marginal plant.
Moss is the ideal plant for a shady garden pond. It softens the look of the pond and provides a soft, low maintenance carpet for wet and rocky areas.
Maintaining a Koi pond or goldfish pond takes extra effort in the fall of the year to help the fish and plants transition to a dormant state for the winter months.
Ponds need to be maintained to keep pet fish clean and healthy. As well as regular routines, a yearly clean is a sensible precaution.
Use wooden, wrought iron, or cast aluminum benches to draw attention to the pond, or use them as a place to sit quietly next to the water garden.
An aquatic polyculture is a pond and garden that combines fish and edible plants. Species support each other in this traditional aquaculture system.
Maianthemum species have heart shaped leaves and edible berries. They are a shade-loving spring flower for the water garden.
While many will naturally use water lilies in the water garden for floating plants, there are those that will like a change of pace.
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