Wateringardening - Water Gardening Index
Civilization's first settlements sprang up around rivers due to irrigation and transportation needs. Later these peoples produced such technologies as canals and aqueducts to bring water to lands further removed from the rivers. Water lilies, lotus, iris, arrowheads and cattails, as well as numerous grasses, trees, and other plants found these new oases as inviting as the people who built them.
Water gardens thus had their beginnings in the fabric of both human history and the processes of Mother Nature. As civilizations grew and segregated into classes of the wealthy and the workers, those who could afford to began to have homes built away from the farming areas but wanted to bring with them the beauties of these areas. These gardens, though at first for food and medicinal herbs, soon became elaborate display areas. Eventually the upper classes and royalty built gardens to bring the whole realm of the world to their front door. Gardens like Versailles in France soon stood for the opulence of the elite. This opulence is still a much sought pleasure, but today anyone with the determination and a little money can have a water garden in his or her own backyard.
Thanks to modern plastics, the back breaking, time consuming, labor and skill intensive processes of building a beautiful water garden have been reduced to a weekend job with only a minimum of easily learned skills.
There are many considerations before the process can commence including major decisions about design, size of the pond, site selection, materials, and methods of construction.
Design Consideration | Site Selection |Construction Methods | Plant Life | Wildlife | Maintenance
Special thanks must be given to several persons who lent their considerable experience; much of their verbal communication was synthesized in this publication.
Marie Caillet of Dallas
Rosa Finsley of Kings Creek Nursery in Cedar Hill
Dr. W. Clyde Ikins of Lakeside Gardens, Bandera, Texas
Dr. Kirk Strawn of College Station, Texas
Bob Webster of Shades of Green Nursery in San Antonio, Texas.
Contact Information
Phone: 512.854.9600 | 1600 Smith Road | Austin, TX 78721
©Copyright 2005-2008 Texas AgriLife Extension Service
Votes:6