Cool are you guys doing the online academy this week 😁😁. Me and my wife went to the academy in February really looking forward to next week. To get inspired even more 😎👏👏.
Having so many cool individual features on this one (especially the placement of the stump and log) without looking too busy what I love most about this one--not easy to pull off and it looks great!!!
Nice job. Would love to do a few projects like this one day. Used to do landscaping and am currently an equipment operator. Maybe one day Love watching the vids. Have a great day fellas.
Watching and learning Too bad I am across the border I would like to see what you could do to my 20 year old ponds Had to replace the liners 2 years ago now I have to aquascape them The local CAC unfortunately does not do revamps You do great work
We just covered the valve, but left the handle exposed above the dirt, and hid it with a dusting of mulch over it so it isn't seen, but still easily accessible
I love the work you guys do. To bad your'e so far away from me. I have a huge pond on my property I want to add a water fall feature to. Any recommendations for companies that service North Florida, Jacksonville specifically?
Thanks Koen! Yeah those boulders sure are fun to work with. But Europe has some amazing rock. I have a cabin in Romania and dreaming of building a water feature there some day!
Tussey Landscaping that sounds awesome an cabin in romania. I already have Some good looking rocks. It’s a Black slade rock, also really fun to work with. And i found Some rocks that look like weathered limestone, but they are really expensive.
How established does the terrain need to be to build a water feature? I've seen you and others in the trade work new soil, but is there any concern with the natural settling issues that new construction presents? If a guy, an every day Joe such as myself, built a home that required three sides of the basement to be filled in with dirt because the mountain won't allow digging without expensive blasting, wanted a pond off the back, would the Aquascape team need to be brought back in a couple years to rebuild due to shifting/settling?
The important part is compaction. If the team building the water feature is aware of the potential for setting, there's a lot they can do to take preventative steps. But no, they wouldn't have to rebuild it. You might have a leak from a low edge or something from settling, but no they wouldn't need to totally rebuild the water feature
isn't there a free service you can call and have a person come out with sensors and mark all the underground cables and pipes? "Dial 811 before you dig"
Yes we do that on every job, but they only mark public utilities. As I mentioned in the video, this was a private line installed by the home owner, they won't mark those
@@Tusseylandscaping Oh, I did not know they did that - must be a PA thing? I did hear that in the video, but I was still confused. In Virginia the 811 guy came out with a fancy detector and swept all around the area where work was going to be done and marked everything. Cable lines, the private power line to my shed, the VA Power line to the house. Each time they have been called, my entire backyard is marked up with colored paint. They didn't mark irrigation lines, because they are PVC and invisible to the sensor (I assume).
@@OttoMatieque Yeah I assume different states are different, but yeah it is kinda stupid. They'll only mark anything they are responsible for. Anything else is your baby
Looks great. Love the front stump.
Thanks Dani! I love driftwood!
Great Video!!! I can’t wait for the next one...
Thanks Paulino! 🙏
Cool are you guys doing the online academy this week 😁😁. Me and my wife went to the academy in February really looking forward to next week. To get inspired even more 😎👏👏.
Hey Paul, not planning on it this time, but I can 100% recommend it!
@@Tusseylandscaping Greg came to the UK last year and got us inspired. I really find your channel inspiring to
You guys did an awesome job there! Love that one!
Thanks Shawn!! 🙏🙏
Always admire your work, keep on creating these beautiful works of art !!!!
Thanks Dan! Same to you brother! 🙌
Having so many cool individual features on this one (especially the placement of the stump and log) without looking too busy what I love most about this one--not easy to pull off and it looks great!!!
Thanks Mike!!
Love the natural cuts the rock forms made. Great feature
Thanks Brad! Yeah I loved the rock too, it made it easy on this job
Nice job.
Would love to do a few projects like this one day. Used to do landscaping and am currently an equipment operator. Maybe one day
Love watching the vids.
Have a great day fellas.
Chase your dreams!
looks amazing man!
Thanks man!
I'm curious to see what these installs look like 2 or 3 years later. After the soil compacts and rocks shift.
A fair amount of our photography on our site is of project multiple years old. They just get better and more naturalized as they age
Very nice video i hope this Season you make lots of more videos
Planning to! 😎🙌
You planning i waiting
@@adeelshaikh2129 yes sir! 😁
Watching and learning
Too bad I am across the border
I would like to see what you could do to my 20 year old ponds
Had to replace the liners 2 years ago now I have to aquascape them
The local CAC unfortunately does not do revamps
You do great work
Why did you put ball valves on for the falls and then cover them with dirt?
We just covered the valve, but left the handle exposed above the dirt, and hid it with a dusting of mulch over it so it isn't seen, but still easily accessible
Tussey Landscaping Thank you.
One of the nicest waterfalls I have seen. Nice work.
How many GPH is the pump?
Love the videos Please keep them coming👍
Thank you! It was a variable flow 4000-8000 pump
The it's time for lunch part got me....I thought you were speaking in tongues or something crazy and I had to watch that 3x.....😳🤔🤪
Ha ha ha yep I was, but with tongues known to man 😜
very nice guys
I love the work you guys do. To bad your'e so far away from me. I have a huge pond on my property I want to add a water fall feature to. Any recommendations for companies that service North Florida, Jacksonville specifically?
Hmmm Florida?... There's this thing called winter...
Looks great - what kinda rock is that. Moss rock?
yep, weathered limestone from Semco
Awesome looking waterfeature Weston. To bad i can’t get any weathered limestone in europe. I would love to work with those rocks
Thanks Koen! Yeah those boulders sure are fun to work with. But Europe has some amazing rock. I have a cabin in Romania and dreaming of building a water feature there some day!
Tussey Landscaping that sounds awesome an cabin in romania. I already have Some good looking rocks. It’s a Black slade rock, also really fun to work with. And i found Some rocks that look like weathered limestone, but they are really expensive.
@Koen yeah I also looked around a bit and couldn't find any. Only limestine is from Belgium Ardenne what I could find but doesn't look the same.
@GlennnD i found something but it is very expensive €1400 per 1000kg
@@koenketel6662 Oinks! Nevermind then :D
I need one of these in my front yard. How many mistakes do you think I would make if I tried this on my own? I watch the Bible of ponds religiously.
It's like any skill. Your first one is never as good as your 100th
Nice job Weston. What do you guys sell this for?
$10k
How established does the terrain need to be to build a water feature? I've seen you and others in the trade work new soil, but is there any concern with the natural settling issues that new construction presents? If a guy, an every day Joe such as myself, built a home that required three sides of the basement to be filled in with dirt because the mountain won't allow digging without expensive blasting, wanted a pond off the back, would the Aquascape team need to be brought back in a couple years to rebuild due to shifting/settling?
The important part is compaction. If the team building the water feature is aware of the potential for setting, there's a lot they can do to take preventative steps. But no, they wouldn't have to rebuild it. You might have a leak from a low edge or something from settling, but no they wouldn't need to totally rebuild the water feature
isn't there a free service you can call and have a person come out with sensors and mark all the underground cables and pipes? "Dial 811 before you dig"
Yes we do that on every job, but they only mark public utilities. As I mentioned in the video, this was a private line installed by the home owner, they won't mark those
@@Tusseylandscaping Oh, I did not know they did that - must be a PA thing? I did hear that in the video, but I was still confused. In Virginia the 811 guy came out with a fancy detector and swept all around the area where work was going to be done and marked everything. Cable lines, the private power line to my shed, the VA Power line to the house. Each time they have been called, my entire backyard is marked up with colored paint. They didn't mark irrigation lines, because they are PVC and invisible to the sensor (I assume).
@@OttoMatieque Yeah I assume different states are different, but yeah it is kinda stupid. They'll only mark anything they are responsible for. Anything else is your baby
Was that second language Romanian?
Actually Lucescu.... Romanian name?
Tussey Landscaping yes I am Romanian! I had to rewind when I heard you because I knew it was Romanian.
👏😁 that's awesome. My wife is Romanian, I lived over there for 2 years while we were dating and getting married
Tussey Landscaping that’s Awesome! Small world! I’m all the way out in Vancouver, WA.
Ye it is! Thanks for connecting here! Thanks for watching too!
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
:)