Come sit by our display ponds, listen to the soothing sounds of the babbling brook and spilling waterfalls, watch the fish and observe the wonderful aquatic plants, and picture that whole scene becoming the centerpiece in your garden. Then talk to David Hornbaker or Rich Hornbaker. They will be glad to show you how and why Aquascape ponds work so well and answer any questions you might have.
Dave's crew can install most ponds in one or two days. We do all the digging by hand, so your yard is not torn up in the process. We provide the rock, and leave the area around the pond mulched and ready for you to landscape.
For you energetic do-it-yourselfers, we also sell kits, delivered to your door, with complete instructions, including a how-to video. The hard parts are the physical labor of digging out the pond, and then obtaining, hauling, and putting in the rock. But it can be done, and we'll be glad to give you all of the advice and explanation that you might need.
Pondless Waterfalls
Dave and his crew installed our first pondless waterfall in August of 2006, and it has proven to be a popular attraction. Kids love it. They can walk right up to the last waterfall and play in the water. They usually get wet, but no one has to worry about them falling in the water.
It took the crew just a day or so to install. A pondless waterfall has most of the same ingredients as a pond does: a BioFalls, rubber liner for the stream, rubber liner for the pit, a pump, plumbing, and rock. Instead of a skimmer box, there is a snorkel and centipede in the pit. The snorkel is a chamber which protects the pump and allows access to the pump for servicing, and for removing the pump in the winter. The centipede is another chamber, attached to the snorkel, which allows water into the snorkel so that it can be pumped back to the top of the waterfall.
Compared to a pond, the pondless waterfall requires less rubber liner and less labor, so it is a little cheaper to install. Maintenance is much less. Since there is no pond sitting in the sun, there is no significant algae problem to deal with. Cleanout in the spring consists of raking out any leaves and twigs that have accumulated in the stream over the winter, pumping out the old water in the pit, and replacing it with fresh water.