Absolutely love it and everything that you’re doing! I just built my first pond less waterfall and stream. As I built it things changed, and now I’ve over built my stream for the size of catchment basin and more water will flow into it, and it will flood out. But I have a plan, I have an extra liner that I will use to create water hold points in the stream that won’t drain out and overflow the basin, otherwise, I will have to dig out the entire basin and make it larger and a little deeper. But there’s a sidewalk and a tree that is preventing that. I could possibly make the ponds upstream a little bit smaller, but it’s just about perfect for what I want so I will create a pond within a pond in the two upper pooling areas.
I did know about the calculations, but one thing caught my attention, that was not yet on my radar: The influence, that the width of the overflow on a negative edge has on the amount of water in motion on the pond's surface. Thanks.
An alternative to electric based pumps is to use a syphon. You can ensure your pond is always* running. There are plenty YT videos teaching how to make water flow from a lower to higher ground without nothing but pipes and the water itself. * unless the siphon gets stuck by material blocking water to flow.
@@Fredward1986 There's no such thing. Most are YT clickbait. The closest you can get, is by using a water ram- but that requires some source of natural waterflow on the property to power itself. If you happen to have a natural stream on your property, and also want to add an artificial one on higher ground, THEN you could do so via a water ram. But this is an edge case that won't apply to most people.
When I subscribed, you had 17K Subs .. look at you now. Must have done something right .. ? Your passionate about what you do!. That's what people love.
@@Ozponds That's what people like, you haven't sold out to commercialism & do your videos your way, not what tries desperate to Sell. People get enough of that in the real world. Don't change.
Love all your videos. I purchased your planning guide, and have a question with flow rates. I know you want bog volume pumped at least once every hour. If I'm running a small stream to waterfall, how can i calculate if the return from the bog is enough to have this run correctly? Or is adding a the second pump the only way? If so where do I locate and pump from? Thank you!
As you are building it you can split the flow and use a bucket to calculate your flow rate. You’ll need to time how long it takes the bucket to fill, then do your calculations. If using two pumps both will go in the skimmer or intake bay.
Hello, thank you for sharing all your knowledge ! Your videos helped me a lot in adding a bog filter to my small pond. Could you tell us the name of the moss that looks like cushion at 7:11 ?
I think it’s SCLERANTHUS BIFLORUS “DROUGHT HARDY, FROST TOLERANT, GROUNDCOVER, NATIVES FOR CONTAINERS The common name for this species is ‘Canberra Grass’ even though it has a very un-grass-like appearance, it is commonly mistaken for a moss and makes a wonderful moss substitute in Japanese style gardens. It is happiest in a sunny position and contrasts well with broad-leaved plants” In Europe there’s a plant that looks very similar called “sagina subulata” aka “scotch moss”.
Why do you prefer bog filters higher than pond water line fed from pond and then gravitationally returning water to pond instead of negative edge with filter fed gravitationally and then water pumped up into the pond? Is one solution better than other? I am thinking of digging bog filter into the ground to operate on pond water level and then pumping up filtered water back up.
I did a vid on my views on up-flow vs down-flow. It’s really just personal preference. I don’t really care as long as the correct amount of water is moving through the correct amount of filter media.
@@Ozponds Frankly, I meant up-flow in both variants but in one with pump before the filter pouring water into filter and in another pump behind the filter sucking water from filter. Both need correct water flow thru the pump but in first it can overflow the filter and in the other run dry.
Absolutely love it and everything that you’re doing! I just built my first pond less waterfall and stream. As I built it things changed, and now I’ve over built my stream for the size of catchment basin and more water will flow into it, and it will flood out. But I have a plan, I have an extra liner that I will use to create water hold points in the stream that won’t drain out and overflow the basin, otherwise, I will have to dig out the entire basin and make it larger and a little deeper. But there’s a sidewalk and a tree that is preventing that. I could possibly make the ponds upstream a little bit smaller, but it’s just about perfect for what I want so I will create a pond within a pond in the two upper pooling areas.
Sounds good. Hope it works out 😊👍
Absolutely awesome video. Explained it perfectly Kev. Thank you for another enjoyable educational update ❤
Thanks for the support 😊👍
It all looks so lovely! I wish I could have a yard full of streams and ponds.
I do feel very lucky. As the gardens grow in it should only get better 🤞
I did know about the calculations, but one thing caught my attention, that was not yet on my radar: The influence, that the width of the overflow on a negative edge has on the amount of water in motion on the pond's surface. Thanks.
Glad you got something out of it.
Nice clip, AGAIN. I tickled the thumbs up 👍 button to feed the algorithm monsters.....
Keep them coming, Kev. Spring is coming.
Legend! Can’t wait for spring!
An alternative to electric based pumps is to use a syphon. You can ensure your pond is always* running. There are plenty YT videos teaching how to make water flow from a lower to higher ground without nothing but pipes and the water itself.
* unless the siphon gets stuck by material blocking water to flow.
Can you post a link please? I can't understand how you could siphon against gravity.
@@Fredward1986 There's no such thing. Most are YT clickbait. The closest you can get, is by using a water ram- but that requires some source of natural waterflow on the property to power itself.
If you happen to have a natural stream on your property, and also want to add an artificial one on higher ground, THEN you could do so via a water ram. But this is an edge case that won't apply to most people.
I’ve seen some that waste a lot of water getting water up hill. Can you post a link to one suitable for running a filter?
Those are the ones I’ve seen. No good for most of us.
@@Fredward1986 ua-cam.com/video/auukrodKOXI/v-deo.html My dad used to empty our pool like this.
When I subscribed, you had 17K Subs .. look at you now. Must have done something right .. ? Your passionate about what you do!. That's what people love.
I do love ponds. I’m still surprised. I’m incredibly ordinary.
@@Ozponds That's what people like, you haven't sold out to commercialism & do your videos your way, not what tries desperate to Sell. People get enough of that in the real world. Don't change.
Great video! I was wondering what you made your bridges with. I’m going to replace my bridge
It’s a treated pine frame with composite deck boards over the top.
@@Ozponds oh thanks! ☺️
Love all your videos. I purchased your planning guide, and have a question with flow rates. I know you want bog volume pumped at least once every hour. If I'm running a small stream to waterfall, how can i calculate if the return from the bog is enough to have this run correctly? Or is adding a the second pump the only way? If so where do I locate and pump from? Thank you!
As you are building it you can split the flow and use a bucket to calculate your flow rate. You’ll need to time how long it takes the bucket to fill, then do your calculations. If using two pumps both will go in the skimmer or intake bay.
thanks mate
Hello, thank you for sharing all your knowledge ! Your videos helped me a lot in adding a bog filter to my small pond.
Could you tell us the name of the moss that looks like cushion at 7:11 ?
I think it’s SCLERANTHUS BIFLORUS
“DROUGHT HARDY, FROST TOLERANT, GROUNDCOVER, NATIVES FOR CONTAINERS
The common name for this species is ‘Canberra Grass’ even though it has a very un-grass-like appearance, it is commonly mistaken for a moss and makes a wonderful moss substitute in Japanese style gardens. It is happiest in a sunny position and contrasts well with broad-leaved plants”
In Europe there’s a plant that looks very similar called “sagina subulata” aka “scotch moss”.
That’s scleranthus biflorus
Hi Kev, I'm building a bog filter while following your videos. Around how deep should the false bottom be in a wheelie bin thats 100cm tall?
30cm is sufficient.
@@Ozponds Cheers bud
Thank you
😊👍
Why do you prefer bog filters higher than pond water line fed from pond and then gravitationally returning water to pond instead of negative edge with filter fed gravitationally and then water pumped up into the pond?
Is one solution better than other?
I am thinking of digging bog filter into the ground to operate on pond water level and then pumping up filtered water back up.
I did a vid on my views on up-flow vs down-flow. It’s really just personal preference. I don’t really care as long as the correct amount of water is moving through the correct amount of filter media.
@@Ozponds Frankly, I meant up-flow in both variants but in one with pump before the filter pouring water into filter and in another pump behind the filter sucking water from filter.
Both need correct water flow thru the pump but in first it can overflow the filter and in the other run dry.