Nature and Gardening
All things green, outdoors, and nature-y. Whether it's animals in their natural habitat, hiking trails and mountains, or planting a little garden for yourself (and everything in between), you can talk about it here.
See also our Environment community, which is focused on weather, climate, climate change, and stuff like that.
(It's not mandatory, but we also encourage providing a description of your image(s) for accessibility purposes! See here for a more detailed explanation and advice on how best to do this.)
This community's icon was made by Aaron Schneider, under the CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.
Very nice, looks calming!
Beautiful!
Lovely! We have a pond that’s slowly but surely being reclaimed by nature. I don’t plan on stopping mother nature, but recently the water has become mud? I guess we’ll have to dig it out and refill it again with rainwater.
That's great! I'm looking at putting one in on my property. Do you have any tips?
Start digging! I dug it all with a 6 foot iron digging pole (weighs about 25 pounds but breaks things up real well). Make sure you know where your pipes are.
Include many different depths -- energy exists along boundaries -- so everything that wants to live in it can.
Have at least one side on which small animals can get a drink (shallow beach vs sheer rock.
Go a bit deeper than you want the bottom to be since you'll have some sort of rocks in the bottom over your liner. I splurged on a HDPE liner.
If you have rocks on your property, use those in the pond.
If you want fries and salamander, don't add fish.
Leave overhangs underwater to give things a place to hide.
If you know someone with a healthy pond, get a bucket of their water and done plant cuttings to get a jump start on biodiversity.
I'll think of some more later!
Hahaha fries* was supposed to be frogs!