there is something so peaceful about having a pond.
There is isn't there

. We have an ex-duck pond which has been cleaned out and now has clear water, no ducks and loads of tadpoles - probably froglets by now. Has some yellow flag but not much else, so lots of planting to do. The other pond is new and I'm just filling it with plants. Everyone asks when we are going to put fish in but we would rather leave it for the wildlife. Anyway, the last fish we had here died, and we have nowhere else to keep them safe over the winter. If the solid ice pond doesn't get them, the heron will
I love to sit with my eyes closed listening to the waterfalls and imagining I am way up in the Highlands beside a stream doing a bit of wild camping. I feel myself relax deliciously then a big lorry thunders past on our tiny but overused road - ah well, a moment of peace.
Since putting the ornamental ponds in we have had a great increase in birds coming into the garden, as well as insects - including the demon midgie which is about the only downside. When we first moved here 18 years ago we were visited by a dragonfly but we had no pond then. I have been hoping to entice it back ever since - hopefully this year or next

. The swallows love to play over the ponds - they swoop down to get a drink on the wing or sometimes to have a lightening bath in passing, and they skim the surface to catch those midgies. There are so many new baby birds and it's lovely watching them going down to drink for the first time. Yesterday there were several sparrow mums showing their babies how to have their first bath in the pond - great to watch. Nearly as great a thief of time as talking with pigs
Bodger, your boat pond is inspired - brilliant. The main pond looks very much as if it belongs and you will get so much enjoyment watching it being colonised by critters.