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#1
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Problem pond: Help with construction, please
The previous owners of our house built an absolutely stunning example
of a horrible pond - it would lose around 40 gallons a day to leaks. We decided to destroy and replace it, and we would have succeeded too - had it not been for the fact that the bottom of the pond was built with reinforced concrete and a clay bottom. The underliner was about as thin as a trashbag - it would flake off in a high wind. How can I remove this reinforced concrete, and excavate the clay underneath the pond? I've tried a 12 pound sledgehammer, crowbar, and a large pickaxe. All I've succeeded in doing is pulverising it. The only thing that seems to cut into the clay is the pickaxe, so I'm in the dark as to how I would remove that as well. I'll update this topic with pictures of my progress if the need arises. |
#2
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The pickax is what we used as our
ground is full of rocks, rocks and more rocks. Finally DH decided to make the pond deeper by building up the sides. He started stripping turf by the side fence line and now I have roses and butterlfy bushes planted there. The sides were built up with turf, about one foot high and one foot wide) the liner pulled up and over it. It protects the pond from run off and gives a nice place for the dogs to lay down (we covered some of the liner with turf), the kids sit on it and tangle their feet in the water. Other areas are covered with rocks. You can see a picture of the pond at www.blogfromthebog.com check to the right for an article archived under The Pond. kathy :-) |
#3
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#4
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I have seen them break up clay on the home shows with a small jackhammer,
you can rent them by the day.... wrote in message oups.com... The previous owners of our house built an absolutely stunning example of a horrible pond - it would lose around 40 gallons a day to leaks. We decided to destroy and replace it, and we would have succeeded too - had it not been for the fact that the bottom of the pond was built with reinforced concrete and a clay bottom. The underliner was about as thin as a trashbag - it would flake off in a high wind. How can I remove this reinforced concrete, and excavate the clay underneath the pond? I've tried a 12 pound sledgehammer, crowbar, and a large pickaxe. All I've succeeded in doing is pulverising it. The only thing that seems to cut into the clay is the pickaxe, so I'm in the dark as to how I would remove that as well. I'll update this topic with pictures of my progress if the need arises. |
#5
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Derek Broughton wrote:
Any tool equipment rental shop Sorry for the redundancy redundancy. -- derek |
#6
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#7
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#8
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Ok, I've placed an order for a 40lb electric Jackhammer this Saturday.
I'm hoping to get some good results out of it, seeing as I was able to tear up a bit more concrete with a 17lb large crowbar and pick combo. http://img250.echo.cx/img250/2962/img02887yh.jpg original pond. Notice the "glass-clear water" http://img246.echo.cx/img246/5329/img03082ke.jpg progress-(imageshack) http://img246.echo.cx/img246/3682/img03097xp.jpg progress-(Imageshack) http://img246.echo.cx/img246/2757/img03112lt.jpg progress-(imageshack) How would I go about moving the earth underneath the pond? With the jackhammer you say? *confused* |
#10
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http://img250.echo.cx/img250/2962/img02887yh.jpg original pond. Notice
the "glass-clear water" I would swear this pond has been on rec.ponds before with the original owners. Was it the waterfall (in behind the plant if there is one) that leaked, or the whole pond? What is the orange cup in the middle? ~ jan See my ponds and filter design: www.jjspond.us ~Keep 'em Wet!~ Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
#11
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Oh goodness, yes.. We had problems with the waterfall as well. The pond
came in absolute horrible quality when we moved in; nearly as bad as it was in the first picture, save for for times as many fish. Ended up just building a bypass with some old PVC and tubing, but that was ages ago... more pictures, more progress! It turned out that the waterfall they built wasnt protected against leaks of any type, but more rather a giant rock mass cemented together. It wasnt on any sort of liner, and hence water would simply drift into the soil. Of course, you've also seen the state of the liner underneath the pond; cracked beyond all belief. The liner wasnt doing anything useful, whatsoever. http://img252.echo.cx/img252/4719/dcp007633oq.jpg (the pond, as close as the original condition as possible. I believe there was a little giant pump with a shoebox sized prefilter along with a brick of barley to boot. The main filtration is now the holding tank's filter.) http://img142.echo.cx/img142/9930/img02101em.jpg (the original hole that caught our attention) http://img134.echo.cx/img134/9948/img03122lh.jpg (More pond progress. Those chunks are quite heavy.. I need to pulverise them each separately) http://img134.echo.cx/img134/2263/img03152jb.jpg (Holding tank water, now Chamomile tea color. I hope this doesnt last, but its a great jump from chocolate cream.) I'm getting through this cement at about two square feet a day. I should be done by this Friday, leaving ample time to excavate. In the mean time, I'm trying to decide how I should keep such a disaster from happening again, and have been planning on building a filtration system that consists of a homemade bead filter, homemade "bioreactor (large tank of large surface area material), and a plenty-large homemade vortex. Water quality in the small holding tank is also degrading quite rapidly; I believe its going over its first bacterial bloom. The fish are atleast eating now, which is nice.. Thanks for your help! More pictures, content, more updates on the way. |
#12
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wrote in message oups.com... The liner wasnt doing anything useful, whatsoever. http://img252.echo.cx/img252/4719/dcp007633oq.jpg (the pond, as close as the original condition as possible. ================== There may be server problems but only this picture is available. -- McKoi.... the frugal ponder... EVERYONE: "Please check people's headers for forgeries before flushing." NAMES ARE BEING FORGED. Do not feed the trolls. ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
#13
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Water quality in the small holding tank is also degrading quite
rapidly; I believe its going over its first bacterial bloom. The fish are atleast eating now, which is nice.. Don't forget the Amquell (ammonia detox additives) a little salt for nitrite detox and 10% water changes every few days. Test the water, and if you don't have a test kit, do the above and order some. In the meantime, chisel away. ~ jan ~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~ |
#14
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In reply to both of your queries:
The server, or rather the image hosting site I am using is called imageshack (.us), and hosts images for free. Be that as it may, the images you're trying to view are huge - I'm quite sorry about that, however I always find it annoying when an image online isnt the size of a poster, and I'd much rather change that than leave things the way they are. -Your load times will be SLOW, the images are nearly a megabyte in size- http://img231.echo.cx/img231/8454/dcp007460ol.jpg (The fish, nearly two years ago. Its been that long?) As for additives... doh! what was I thinking.. I'll get right on that. Water quality was so above-par on the second day of work, I didnt think any more of it. Chisel away I will. Your help is always appreciated.. and compensated for graciously by many photos and bits of media content. |
#15
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Victory! The cement is finally out of its foundation, and ready to be
moved off site. However, I have a grave problem.. upon measuring the doorway and the width of the excavator, I've come to the conclusion that it WONT FIT THROUGH THE DOOR. grr.. http://img135.echo.cx/img135/7014/img03192ik.jpg (Finally done! The rock on the right needs to be carted away.) http://img135.echo.cx/img135/1706/img03228ln.jpg (entrance in which digging device must fit through) http://img135.echo.cx/img135/2662/img03269er.jpg (absolutely beautiful picture of the waterfall I've been dismantling. not much to brag over.) Can anyone recommend any suitable replacements to an excavator, in all of its 1-day-finish-the-job-and-have-fish-next-week goodness? If not.. I'll be tearing down a fence too. . As always, more pictures and media with every update. I promise. |
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