Advice on filling i...
 

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[Closed] Advice on filling in a koi pond

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We have a brick/concrete koi pond in the garden about 5' deep. I've finally decided to fill it in and have a lovely raised bed for growing some veg in.

Presumably I need to break up the bottom then fill it with clean hardcore and topsoil?

Anything I should be aware of before doing this?


 
Posted : 23/03/2015 3:20 pm
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Take the fish out first.


 
Posted : 23/03/2015 3:26 pm
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From (recent) experience, you can normally get subsoil delivered from a local skip merchants for nothing but the cost of delivery. That (and building rubble) did for us for a similar depth pond. However, once you've estimated how many tonnes of soil you need (a builders bag is about a tonne) - treble that figure. I shovelled and barrowed about 20 tonne of the piggin stuff last year. Which was great fun.


 
Posted : 23/03/2015 3:26 pm
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How about a sunken garden? #lazybastard


 
Posted : 23/03/2015 3:28 pm
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I shovelled and barrowed about 20 tonne of the piggin stuff last year. Which was great fun.

ours is tucked away a long way from any delivery point, down a narrow winding path with lots of steps (up and down) on the way...it ain't gonna be fun!


 
Posted : 23/03/2015 3:34 pm
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get subsoil delivered from a local skip merchants for nothing but the cost of delivery. That (and building rubble) did for us for a similar depth pond.

did you go for clear layers of rubble, sub soil then top soil? if so any suggested depths of each?


 
Posted : 23/03/2015 3:36 pm
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I filled a similar sized pond in our garden in. Ours just had a plastic liner with carpet underneath. I removed the liner and carpet and then used it as a bit of a landfill site for a few months. We had just moved into the house which needed renovating so I managed to generate a bit of rubble from the house and garden. When it was maybe 30cms or so from the top I levelled it with topsoil and then turfed - looks fine now. Like you no easy access to the pond, so it took loads of trips with a wheel barrow to put in the topsoil.


 
Posted : 23/03/2015 3:59 pm
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Ours wasn't very deep-2ft max. so I half filled with rubble, compacted as best I could then washed in some topsoil to fill the gaps and try to avoid sinkage. Then topped it with topsoil & seeded. 2 years later it's still flat but the new grass area is still slightly visible. Topsoil around my way (Cambridge) is blimmin' expensive though. In hindsight I used soil that was way too good to bulk fill, should have got any old stuff to fill and just topped with good stuff for the seed.


 
Posted : 23/03/2015 4:35 pm
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We moved into a house that came with a pond that was surrounding by patio on 3 sides; the 4th side lining up with the lawn and the edge of the patio.

We kept it for a while (the previous owner left the fish in it) and then decided to get rid as it was too much faff.

As ours was half sunken & half raised, once it was demolished we had a lot of bricks/rubble to fill the hole with (once we'd got rid of the fish and removed the liner, that was).

Because of the position of it, I wanted to put some slabs over the top of it, just to make the area usable until we could get the patio properly re-done.
I chucked all the rubble in along with a load of small-ish hardcore, as I was concerned that the large-ish bits of rubble would settle over time and make the whole thing sink.
I then just levelled it (ahem, it's roughly level) and cemented some slabs in place.

This was after getting the lining out & knocking the wall around it down. The obvious deep end just had a couple of brick high edging, whereas the other end was about 0.7m high. The whole thing was 4m long

[URL= http://i105.photobucket.com/albums/m215/me96kka/DSCN4983_zpsfe4c504d.jp g" target="_blank">http://i105.photobucket.com/albums/m215/me96kka/DSCN4983_zpsfe4c504d.jp g"/> [/IMG][/URL]

This was halfway through paving:

[url= https://farm8.staticflickr.com/7456/12977226205_9d44f6eba1_z.jp g" target="_blank">https://farm8.staticflickr.com/7456/12977226205_9d44f6eba1_z.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/kLKFep ]13-11-09 DSCN5311[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/people/91882170@N06/ ]STW stumpy01[/url], on Flickr

and this was once finished.

[url= https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2597/12977209825_3bbaa6508a_z.jp g" target="_blank">https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2597/12977209825_3bbaa6508a_z.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/kLKAmZ ]13-11-11 DSCN5320[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/people/91882170@N06/ ]STW stumpy01[/url], on Flickr

Once all the other million & one jobs are done around the house/garden (in about 20yrs) I'll smash it all up & put something proper down....

OP it was bloody hard work!


 
Posted : 23/03/2015 4:41 pm
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Our old pond was only a couple of feet deep, but we had very confused frogs sat on the patio that replaced it for a couple of years afterwards in the amphibian breeding season!


 
Posted : 23/03/2015 7:34 pm

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