Yes, and please no giggling on account of how similar it sounds to a feminine hygiene product.
This is the iconoclastic artist in me sprouting fresh and strange ideas as I learn to think in the medium of plants and
earthworks.
Or maybe this is really old hat to the permies here. I'm relatively new to this scene, so I still think all my ideas have never been thought of before
I'm willing to have my hat handed to me. I just want to learn and grow.
I have been making plans to permacize a low and (relatively) wet depression on my
land by berming up the side just before it flows onto my neighbor's property.
Flows, that is, during torrential rains when the
water runs faster than it can soak in. That happens maybe 2 or 3 times a year, and only in this one spot.
But it can become quite a large
pond for short periods.
Anyway, I love the idea of ponds, especially the ability they have to moderate temperatures, create heat traps, and intensify the
solar effect during cooler seasons by reflecting light, ala the mighty
Sepp, but I _hate_ the idea of accumulating water in one location only to watch it evaporate.
So, has anyone tried this?
Dig out your pond and seal it somehow just as an ordinary pond, probably with a bioplastic glee, then, while it's still moist, and after some testing of
course, fill the damn thing up with sand.
Yes, that sacrifices the option for fish and the beauty of a natural pond with water, BUT... that doesn't seem very practical in my location. in exchange for this trade off I'd get...
1. massively improved evaporation deterrence (Molllison has touted sand as a way to basically eliminate evaporation)
2. no mosquito breeding ground
3. the additional density for thermal storage and temperature moderation is probably close to that of a regular pond.
4.
solar reflection off of the light level surface would offer very similar benefits of a regular pond.
5. Plants grown around it can still take advantage of the extra moisture.
6. Water still has the potential to exceed the sand level and provide a periodic accessible water resource for animals and birds.
So, now someone will come along and bust my bubble and tell me, "oh yeah, that's known as a so and so ... and has been practiced by la la la... for more than badaba... "
But that's ok. If one has a bubble at all, I believe it's the civic duty of the community to bust it with extreme prejudice.
After all, enabling misguided ignoramuses is so last century.
I'd love to know if this has been done under any other name and what the real world results and issues are.
And if it hasn't been done, what do you think?
Would hate to find out after buying that much sand that there are hidden gotchas that aren't obvious.
Paul