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Container Water Gardens

Great ponds in small packages.

Preparation and Overview

Container gardens with aquatic plants create more mystery than plants potted in soil. They make you want to go outside and have a look. Plus, they're extremely low maintenance. Top them off with water before you go on vacation, and they're still bright and beautiful when you come home. And if you add a spouting ornament or water movement of any kind, the kids will love it even more than you do.

Container water gardens are inexpensive and easy to build, too. So here's how to get into the swim of things with a container water garden.

What You Need
For a basic garden, you need at least an 18- to 20-in. plastic container that's 7 to 8 in. deep, a small submersible pump, a spouting ornament, plants, clear vinyl tubing, clean kitty litter, pea gravel or small pebbles and a nylon stocking. Most items are readily available at larger garden centers or on-line.

How To Do It
The photos show you how. Here are a few additional tips:
Care, Maintenance and Something Fishy
Taking care of water gardens is a breeze. Top them off as water evaporates and scoop off the occasional dead leaf or bit of algae.

Plants maintain water clarity by absorbing decaying matter through their roots as food. But if the water starts looking gunky, remove the plants, rinse the container and refill.

For any plants needing a boost, press a fertilizer pellet into the potting soil. You can also add a Mosquito Dunk (about $1 each at garden centers) a couple times in the summer to kill mosquito larvae without posing harm to people or pets. Smaller containers will only need a small piece.

For a small container, plant a dwarf lily so the pads don't completely cover the surface as they grow. For larger water gardens, you can add a floating plant like water hyacinth, duckweed or water lettuce.

A dish-style garden is too small for koi or goldfish, but larger containers, like whiskey barrels or larger terracotta pots, are ideal. (Note: Water in metal containers usually gets too warm for fish.) Fish help keep the garden clean by eating algae, decaying plant material and mosquito larvae. Make certain to read up on fish so you give them the proper care and learn how they will impact your garden.


Step-by-Step Photos and Instructions


1. Drill a small hole in the rim of the container to mount the spouting ornament. If you need to bend the support spike to level or position the spouter, grip it with two pairs of pliers so you don't crack the ornament.


2. Spread the soil of the lily or other deep-water plants in one half of the container, then add kitty litter to create a level floor.


3. Add a partition to divide the container into halves. Plant the shallow-growing marginal plants and spread more kitty litter over the soil. On the low side, nestle a plastic cup for the pump in the kitty litter, keeping it covered with plastic to prevent gravel from falling in.


4. Spread pea gravel over the kitty litter. Keep the floor on the lily side lower to allow the lily stems room to extend upward when you add water.


5. Connect the pump to the spouter with vinyl tubing. Use a transition piece of 1/2-in. tubing if necessary to connect the 3/8-in. tube to the pump. Press the pump into the cup so that the suction cups anchor it to the bottom.


6. Cover the pump with a nylon stocking filter to keep gravel from clogging the pump, and then cover the pump with pea gravel.

The Super-Simple Approach


If you want an instant water garden, simply slip a plastic barrel liner into a decorative wooden barrel, set some pavers of various heights in place to act as pedestals and then perch a few potted aquatic plants on top. Just make sure to position the plants at the depth indicated on the plant tag or information sheet. The only drawback to this approach is that the container won't look as natural close up -- you can see the plastic pots below the surface. You can even add a spouter to the barrel; the pump can simply sit on a pedestal without a cup.

If you can't find a plastic barrel liner, you can make a watertight terra-cotta container by plugging the drain hole.


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