In about October last year I was bitten by a snake whilst cleaning out the skimmer box on our pool. The little bugger was hiding under the flap and got me on the finger! So I spent the next 6 hours in hospital being stuck by a multitude of needles to find out whether I had been envenomated. In the end we decided it was a Keelback. Not particularly venemous, and I had not been significantly envenomated.
However my enthusiasm for the pool subsided somewhat and I didn't do any more work on the pool for some months. Hence the pool was without chlorine.
So now we don't want to add chlorine which would possibly kill but certainy repel our new friends. This caused me to start searching for an alternative management system for the pool. In fact "natural swimming pools" are quite well known in Europe. They use biological filtration in a way similar to that used in an aquarium. This is accomplished by the work of bacteria on gravel filters and on the roots of plants. The result is sweet water that can sustain plants and a complex ecosystem of insects, frogs and even fish!
It is possible to have a pond with all this life as well as clean clear water good enough to swim in!
Our plan is to start adding plants, and as the weather warms up add a tub of gravel and reeds on the edge of the pool. Water will be pumped through the reed bed and fall back into the pool. This will make a water feature/water fall as well as a filtering sytem for the pool water. It is possible to clean the water with plants alone but we would need to cover half of the pool suface with pants and it still might not be enough. The external filter will increase the filtering capacity and allow us to plan and distribute the plants aesthetically.
The water is currenty very clear so we feel there is no urgency to add the filtering system. The weather has already cooled off for autumn so we won"t be swiming for a few months.
The beginning
So we have simply started adding plants!
The step is the obvious place to start. We have some old plastic crates to stand the plants on at the right depth.
Some of them we have bedded into gravel. Last week we visited a hydroponics shop and found some clay beads used to hold plants in that systm. We thought they might work well in our situation, providing bedding for the plants as well as a porous surface area for bacteria to inhabit. But they float! Joe found that heating them in the microwave before plunging them into cold water causes them to sink. Presumaby they absorb the water to some extent. However they are not very heavy and the pots need added stones to keep them securly grounded on the stands in the water.
The stands are quite visible which is not so aesthetialy pleasing. I think I will add a covering of shade cloth to reduce their visibility
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In the photo you can see how close the pool is to the decks. The pool fence in this shot is temporary. The decks have just been completed and the builders have not yet restored the final fence. For my American friends - pool fences are compulsory in Austalia. Drowning is the mot common cause of death in infants - we have so many home pools and dams. So we just have to put up with the fences.
We also do not have our clothes line back yet. - the clothes on the deck are temporary!
Yesterday we went to a gardening expo and spoke with a pond equipment salesman. He told us that this hasn't been done in Brisbane before!!!!!! I do suppose he meant by his company. He said they had done 4 natural swimming ponds in southern states but not in Brisbane. He seemed a bit fearful that the climate might make it too difficult! However he did tell us about his filtration system (biological) which we could install if all else fails, for about $4000. That is great news. Even though this is quite a significant cost, there will be savings made by not adding chemicals to the pool. and not running the pool pump. We will need some electricity for the filtration system but a fraction of the previous power needs. Oh well- we are not new to bucking the system so here we go again!
The wild life is breeding!
Please do comment if you want to. I could do with technical comments or just your thoughts about all of this. Do you think we are mad? Mind you this is all reversible. If we change our minds we can take the plants out, add chlorine and kill all of the wild life, reverting to normal operations. But we now have seen the vision of how things could be and would not want to go back. We are determind to make this work.
What a great idea!
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