New bonsai garden, including koi pond!

You gotta get at least one large granite stone lantern and one largish Japanese maple that dips down and weeps over the water.
Oh, I’m planning on having Japanese maples!

Stone lantern? Maybe.

I’m planning on at least one, probably two or three Yoshino cherry trees. Not right at the pond, but set off to provide a “background”.

Right now, I’m concentrating on getting the red clay covered! And dressing the edges, and putting in little plants that will grow along the margins.
 
Oh, I’m planning on having Japanese maples!

Stone lantern? Maybe.

I’m planning on at least one, probably two or three Yoshino cherry trees. Not right at the pond, but set off to provide a “background”.

Right now, I’m concentrating on getting the red clay covered! And dressing the edges, and putting in little plants that will grow along the margins.
Wabi sabi, man, wabi sabi!
 
Nice pond! How many fish did you put in initially?
About 20, of 4 species in the 2-3 inch range. The biggest fish we have get to 6 inches.. All native (Although we have red fish, which are a native species but bred to have color; so a variety that is non-natural. However, as they are not goldfish/carp species, they do not ruin the vegetation).

Fish have exploded and I have a predator in there. Not good enough, I have to get a bucket of fish out every year. THis year even the vegetation has been eaten by the fish. TIme for drastic actions here. :(
 
Guys, I used to have a salt water reef tank.
Me too, although my lighting setup was never sufficient to keep the really nice corals. Used to have a yellow tang, flame angel, a couple of clownfish, scooter blenny, cleaner shrimp, caulerpa, starfish, live rock. I gave it up after the tank sprang a leak and dumped 55 gallons of saltwater on my floor.
 
Guys, I used to have a salt water reef tank. Compared to that, maintaining a koi pond is a piece of cake!

Really? What made you get rid of it? I'm fairly big into both reefs and bonsai.

Will you be stocking with anything other than koi?
 
Really? What made you get rid of it? I'm fairly big into both reefs and bonsai.

Will you be stocking with anything other than koi?
Oh, I broke down the reef and gave away all the equipment to a friend when we moved from Atlanta to the country way back in 2002. I had metal halide lights, a chiller, protein skimmer... the works. Would be a lot easier to do today with the led lights!

Just planning on koi. Going to start off with some inexpensive ones to get the cycle going, although as I posted above I don’t anticipate any issues since the pond is over filtered with a biofalls and a bog, and preinnoculated with bacteria and plants.
 
Oh, I broke down the reef and gave away all the equipment to a friend when we moved from Atlanta to the country way back in 2002. I had metal halide lights, a chiller, protein skimmer... the works. Would be a lot easier to do today with the led lights!

Just planning on koi. Going to start off with some inexpensive ones to get the cycle going, although as I posted above I don’t anticipate any issues since the pond is over filtered with a biofalls and a bog, and preinnoculated with bacteria and plants.
Honestly, I had no idea ponds were so complicated. I thought you just dig a hole and fill it with water. But it makes sense, given the complex environment of a natural pond. You've got a beauty, and I hope you enjoy many pleasant hours there.

Is it fairly self-sustaining, or is there a lot of maintenance involved?
 
Honestly, I had no idea ponds were so complicated. I thought you just dig a hole and fill it with water. But it makes sense, given the complex environment of a natural pond. You've got a beauty, and I hope you enjoy many pleasant hours there.

Is it fairly self-sustaining, or is there a lot of maintenance involved?
Once it’s set up, the way I have it set up, it will be very low maintenance. Once a year, we turn off the pump to the bog, drop in a sump pump down the “snorkel” (think well shaft) and pump it out. It’s kinda like cleaning out a septic tank. Mine is oversized, I could probably get by doing it every other year. On the biofalls, lift the filter and hose it out maybe once a quarter, or once every 6 months. There’s a skimmer, which is easy to empty of leaves and debris. I have no overhanging trees, so that’s going to be minimal. Rain should keep it filled most of the year. If there’s a drought, I’ll have to top it up from time to time.

I do have a UV “filter”, which isn’t working right now. The bulb lasts 14 months. So, I’ll replace it when we do the bog pump out. The pond builder is going to find out what’s wrong with the UV, and fix or replace since it’s brand new.

The fish, on the other hand, like to get fed! My plan is an “every other day” feeding schedule. I’m not trying to grow huge koi. In the winter, they don’t need to get fed.
 
Oh, I broke down the reef and gave away all the equipment to a friend when we moved from Atlanta to the country way back in 2002. I had metal halide lights, a chiller, protein skimmer... the works. Would be a lot easier to do today with the led lights!

Just planning on koi. Going to start off with some inexpensive ones to get the cycle going, although as I posted above I don’t anticipate any issues since the pond is over filtered with a biofalls and a bog, and preinnoculated with bacteria and plants.

LED's are funny...sometimes hard to dial in, halides are set and forget and the best quality light you can get, only they are quite hard on the electric bill in the Bay Area...

Yeah, if you add fish slow, with all the surface area you have and all the plants, I doubt you'll have any issue with the nitrogen cycle. Looking great!
 
Oh, I’m planning on having Japanese maples!

Stone lantern? Maybe.

I’m planning on at least one, probably two or three Yoshino cherry trees. Not right at the pond, but set off to provide a “background”.

Right now, I’m concentrating on getting the red clay covered! And dressing the edges, and putting in little plants that will grow along the margins.
If you decide on getting a lantern, get a decent one--i.e. no cast stone, aggregate, cement, or God help us--resin.. Those are crap and will detract from this beautiful installation. Shop around for an actual granite, or basalt stone lantern. There are pretty decent lanterns being carved in the U.S. I got a three foot high, granite oribe lantern about 20 years ago. It was carved in California. Been extremely pleased with it as it ages.
This place has decent stuff:
Rankei and Kotoji ("tuning fork legs allow it to be placed in shallow water) are the traditional lantern styles for water features.
Kotoji
 
If you decide on getting a lantern, get a decent one--i.e. no cast stone, aggregate, cement, or God help us--resin.. Those are crap and will detract from this beautiful installation. Shop around for an actual granite, or basalt stone lantern. There are pretty decent lanterns being carved in the U.S. I got a three foot high, granite oribe lantern about 20 years ago. It was carved in California. Been extremely pleased with it as it ages.
This place has decent stuff:
Rankei and Kotoji ("tuning fork legs allow it to be placed in shallow water) are the traditional lantern styles for water features.
Kotoji
Thanks for the advice. I’m undecided on the lantern. I’m not after a “Japanese Garden” effect. (Although they are beautiful!)

For the time being, I have my hands full just repairing the landscape damage! Lol!!!
 
Thanks for the advice. I’m undecided on the lantern. I’m not after a “Japanese Garden” effect. (Although they are beautiful!)

For the time being, I have my hands full just repairing the landscape damage! Lol!!!
Good luck with the repairs. Hope you have some help...FWIW, a good Japanese lantern doesn't really scream "HEY THIS IS A JAPANESE GARDEN" If you get a good one that's subtle, it "feels" like it should be there and does not bring the kitschy vibe with it.
 
Good luck with the repairs. Hope you have some help...FWIW, a good Japanese lantern doesn't really scream "HEY THIS IS A JAPANESE GARDEN" If you get a good one that's subtle, it "feels" like it should be there and does not bring the kitschy vibe with it.
I agree. Those bamboo fountains definitely do! And I don’t want a Buddha figurine, or one of those Asian face sculptures (I have no idea who/what they’re supposed to symbolize).

Maybe a fake frog or turtle...
 
i think some pagoda style lanterns would look amazing around it , would give it a bit of Asian influence but still have functionality.|
looks great really love what you have done , i cant wait to buy and stop renting so i can tinker with the yard and make it my own, id love to sit among my plants and drink my morning coffee watching the birds
 
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