I constructed one very small
pond on our property and managed to have it seal through a mixture of luck, high clay content and trial and error. (When I say small I mean very, very small - basically the size of a very large bathtub or a touch bigger.) I note this because I'm familiar with the difficulties of getting a
pond to seal. I'm now trying to make a larger pond but where I'm building it probably rules out getting an excavator to it. I have a decent understanding at least on paper of
Sepp Holzer's method, particularly using the excavator to vibrate the soil with a foot or so of standing
water. But I'm trying to think if there's any realistic way for me to duplicate that process without the excavator.
I've though of trying to use a
concrete vibrator. I don't think a surface one is feasible since I don't think you can put those in water - though I've never used one before so I can't say I know. The probe kind makes more sense to me. But I'm not sure that really works in already partially compacted soil. In any case, as you can see I'm really grasping at straws for how I can duplicate or even partially duplicate this vibration part of the process. I assume someone has confronted this set of circumstances before. So I thought I would ask if anyone has any suggestions.
I'll add that the soil where I am is pretty clay-ey. So I go in with that advantage. It's also filled with a lot of rocks verging on boulders, which my
experience with the other pond tells me can be a serious liability.
In any case, this is my first post at Permies. So let me also say that I hope this post is welcome and I'm excited to learn as much as I can. I'm just starting out in
permaculture, very modest ambitions but eager to learn and contribute.