If your
garden’s not big enough for a pond, but you’d love a water feature to add some
cool and calm to your outside space, there are plenty of options.
Pools in
pots, sculptures trickling water and wall attachments spouting a stream can all
be easily sorted – but there are some basics you need to consider, says
award-winning landscape and garden designer Helen Elks-Smith.
“You want good surfaces and you want good plants – and if you are time-poor, I’d be cautious about water,” she says for starters.
Pots can
be high maintenance
“The issue
is, if you have a small body of water, it heats up. When water heats up it goes
green,” Elks-Smith warns. “But if you have a small element of water, you can
probably drain it when it goes green, clean the container and fill it back up
again.”
If you
have, for instance, a half barrel lined with pond liner for a water feature,
the frequency with which you’d have to change the water depends on where you
position it.
“Oxygenating
plants can help to keep the water a bit cleaner,” she notes.
“Often it’s
a good idea to have a little shallow area, like a little shelf you can pop
plants onto, which are planted in little baskets. Not a lot of plants which
grow above the water like the water really deep.”
Consider
filters
Elks-Smith
says: “If you have a still bit of water – and they are very popular – you may
have to have a large amount of filters moving the water.
“There are
loads of kits available, which often come with filters or you can buy them from
specialists who will advise you on the type of pump and filter you need.”
For
modern gardens
“Even if
you plant for nature, it doesn’t have to look homespun. You can have something
that’s up-to-the-minute. Nature doesn’t mind.
“Think
about why you want water in the garden,” suggests Elks-Smith. “For some people,
looking at the reflective surface is what matters. They don’t want the water to
be moving, they want it still. Creating a reflective surface is a great way of
bringing the sky down and bounce the light around. Others wouldn’t want water
to be that still.”
Check your
sound
“There are
many different types of sounds associated with moving water. If you have water
falling from a height, you will get a lot of splash and it’s quite busy to look
at and will make a big sound.
“You could
have water falling from the same height at the same rate onto different things,
and it will sound different,” she notes. “If you want a gentle trickle, the
water would be going over a surface as it drops. The classic is water falling
through a rockery, where you’d see it more than you’d hear it.”
Wall-mounted
water features
“There are
kits where you prop it up or build it against a wall, and the water will fall
out of a chute into a body of water,” says Elks-Smith. “The traditional thing
would have been a lion’s head, while a more contemporary version is a steel
chute.
“These
wall-mounted features tend to be slightly noisier, depending on the height and
speed of the water and how wide the chute is. If you want to change the sound
underneath, you can bring something up from the ground for the water to fall
on, such as stones or pebbles.”
Sculpture-led
streams
You can buy
water feature sculptures, typically where a hole has been drilled in it and the
water is pushed up through the hole. Many have hidden reservoirs, where a pump
and filter sits. The reservoir will need topping up and cleaning from time to
time, and Elks-Smith advises you’ll need an outside electrical supply to run
it, installed by a qualified electrician.
Patio
position
“It makes
sense to be able to see and hear your water feature at the same time,” says
Elks-Smith. “And consider that you might still want to see your water feature
in the winter, when you won’t be in the garden but you can see it from your
kitchen sink, or if you are sitting in your lounge. Think which window would
make a good viewing point.”