How to Incorporate a Backyard Pond into Your Landscape

backyard pond

If you’re looking at your property and wondering where a backyard pond would fit, it’s time to start exploring your options.

To get your creative juices flowing, we recommend visiting our Gallery to view pond photos submitted by other Pondliner.com customers. You can see the kinds of water gardens they’ve created and start generating ideas for your own.

Once you have a few ideas of what you might like to include in your own backyard pond, you can start brainstorming the best place to put it.

Some of the most popular locations include:

  • Near a deck or patio
  • By an already existing garden
  • Right in the middle of the backyard (for a true focal point)
  • Next to a wooded area or trail
  • Near a seating arrangement
  • In viewing distance of a large picture window or sliding glass door

The main goal is to make sure you can see your pond from as many places as possible, or at least from the main viewing points of your home and yard. If you have a deck or an existing seating arrangement, you definitely want people in those areas to be able to see your pond. Or, if you have a big picture window, that should offer a clear view of your creation.

Keep in mind that the elements you want to include within your pond will impact where it needs to be located. Plants and other aquatic life will need some natural light to grow. However, you don’t want to bake your pond all day long, so there should be some shade available as well.

If you want to make the pond construction process as simple as possible, you may want to consider purchasing a koi pond kit. It comes with all the pond supplies you need to create a water garden from scratch, but leaves you with plenty of flexibility to customize it and make it your own.

Play around with different ideas until you find the one that’s best for you. The sky is the limit when it comes to backyard ponds, and you can make yours into whatever you want it to be.

*Note: Be sure to contact a pond expert before you begin building to make sure you’ve chosen a location that will support life and won’t damage the structure of your pond or your existing landscape.