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Author Topic: Anybody install a fountain before?  (Read 1454 times)
Robert
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Posts: 16964


S Florida


« on: October 11, 2023, 06:55:09 PM »

Well it all started when I saw this at an estate store that sells mainly antiques, furniture. Interesting browsing the buildings that house this stuff. Some of the items were extremely expensive when new and the books, dinnerware, all kinds of things that you could see being used in a big place. Some of the drapery, rugs and curtains were made beautifully. They do carry outside furniture but they usually dont carry fountains so this was kind of surprising, when I happened upon it.

When I saw it, I just kind of stood there looking at it for a bit. The wheels started to turn and the possibilities shifted into high gear. First the price, I know the owners and the workers and asked about the price and it was perfect. Next step a few pictures and talk with the other half.




So confer with the other half and we get to this and its a go. She just pointed her finger and that was the ok sign to replace the small bird feeder we had in a corner of the yard.



So this is the bird feeder in the corner at the lower left of the picture and this is the new fountain sitting on the corner of the patio with the other pieces on the grass. I never expected the bottom piece of the fountain to be quite that heavy. I could barley lift it and had to roll it from the front to the back of the house rather than moving it any other way. Solid concrete, had to be 6 to 8 inches thick in certain parts and unbelievably heavy.



This is the working fountain mounted, level, new pump, had to play with the hoses and seal the bottom of the fountain to hold water. I actually had to put the base in the spot I wanted it, and make sure it was level. Then put a wood ramp next to the base to roll the bottom bowl up to a height that I could just let it fall onto the base. First attempt didnt go as planned and in the save it was like trying to stop the Valk from going over after it gets to the tipping point of no return. But stop it I did and devised a plan to put the tow strap through the center of the bowl and through the center of the base and the friction on the tow strap on the cement allowed for controlled movement of the bowl as it went onto the base. Finally got that done, and had to rest for a minute or two.

The plumbing was interesting till I could get the flow right and seal the upper bowl to the hose so that the water went over the side of the bowl instead of through the center next to the hose. You can barely see it but a certain amount of water percolates out the top of the vase the lady is holding. It flows down and most of the water that flows from the upper bowl is the upper hose that is loose from the lower hose. Allowing the water to bypass the connection between the two and filling the upper bowl. 

I also had to run conduit from the power source at the back porch under the patio and behind the bushes running it all the way to the back of the property. In this conduit is the internet connections rather than having them run overhead and power for the fountain. Another project done in this removing the overhead wires and running them under ground. Plus trees swaying in the wind and rain and contacting the lines making the power go out. The poles will stay but the high mounted power lines will be gone and the only wires on the poles will be the internet wires and those will be covered by bushes.

All in all it really came out nice and was exactly what I had wanted for awhile. At night the constant sound of the water is soothing and relaxing as you sit on the back patio or porch. But if I ever do this again I will get some kind of portable lift to hold and transport the bowl and position it.




Did finally replace the grass that was covered due to filling in a rotting tree trunk that was taken out of that spot. Even the overhead power lines are being rerun underground so no more wires overhead and all underground giving the backyard a much cleaner appearance. Whats an add bonus is the power lines running underground will not be so effected by strong winds and rain.



« Last Edit: October 11, 2023, 07:39:47 PM by Robert » Logged

“Some people see things that are and ask, Why? Some people dream of things that never were and ask, Why not? Some people have to go to work and don’t have time for all that.”
Savago
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Posts: 1994

Brentwood - CA


« Reply #1 on: October 11, 2023, 07:39:02 PM »

It looks pretty awesome!
 cooldude

I wonder which species of birds will be attracted by the fountain?

Maybe a small camera to capture videos of the feathered visitors would be a cool feature added to the project?
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Robert
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Posts: 16964


S Florida


« Reply #2 on: October 12, 2023, 04:59:52 AM »

It looks pretty awesome!
 cooldude

I wonder which species of birds will be attracted by the fountain?

Maybe a small camera to capture videos of the feathered visitors would be a cool feature added to the project?


Was thinking the same thing, but get this.

We so we put the old bird bath in the yard also its nothing special as you can see in the pictures and the birds will constantly go to that since its shallow and not very big. They stand in the middle of it and bathe and enjoy themselves. I have to clean the water out of it everyday since it always has feathers and dirt in it. So the big fountain is for us the little one is for them.

Who would have though?  Grin
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“Some people see things that are and ask, Why? Some people dream of things that never were and ask, Why not? Some people have to go to work and don’t have time for all that.”
Oss
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Posts: 12579


The lower Hudson Valley

Ossining NY Chapter Rep VRCCDS0141


WWW
« Reply #3 on: October 13, 2023, 09:24:54 AM »

when I was 12 my dad asked the crew building homes in the neighborhood to come over with the bulldozer and dig a pond out

Since there is a 120or so KV power line right of way behind the house that is where he put the pond and how they got in and out  Maybe he gave the man $200.

Some  old tarps lined the bottom and he put in a small fountain pump

All great for years we could catch tadpoles and lot of frogs to run over by accident with the mower

One day a varmint ate thru the power cord  that was the end of the fountain and dad just dumped leaves every fall in it till soon no more pond at all
« Last Edit: October 13, 2023, 12:00:18 PM by Oss » Logged

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Rams
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Posts: 16166


So many colors to choose from yet so few stand out

Covington, TN


« Reply #4 on: October 13, 2023, 06:06:07 PM »

Nice job on the fountain.

Had I been able to purchase the property behind my home (I tried but they won't sell) that is overgrown and almost unwalkable due to the overgrowth, it has a potentially nice pond on it.   Although the pond is about half covered with lily pads, the spousal unit and I wanted to put one of those fountains that shoot water up in the middle of it.   We researched doing this and found a company that would do it but, it wasn't going to be cheap so, I guess it's a good thing the owner didn't want to sell.

Rams
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Jess from VA
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Posts: 30406


No VA


« Reply #5 on: October 13, 2023, 07:07:50 PM »

Very nice Robert.   cooldude

I had a large three tier (not including the big bottom pool) concrete fountain for many years.

That heavy base took about 7 guys to carry into my backyard, and it went on my deck until I was ready to move it to a center landscape project.  That project was completed the next year but I never had 7 guys to move the base again, so the fountain remained on the corner of my big backyard deck (on the ground, not elevated). 

In it's heyday, I had the fountain, Jacuzzi hot tub with sun shade, many potted plants, nice outdoor furniture, lighting and music, and all private in my back yard.  I also kept that big deck looking like a perfect basketball court.

The real beauty of a fountain is not looking at it, it's the water noise.  And over time, I dialed back my water flow to have nice small trickles of flowing water which sounded much nicer than a more powerful flow and splash (and it also cut down on having to add water back all the time).  A little dose of bleach from time to time keeps things clean and is not harmful to birds.  When the water is not running, the mosquitoes are breeding in it, and bleach is good for that too.

Over the years, predictably, the fountain water did my deck no good.  The concrete in the fountain began to crumble.  I fixed it a dozen times, then I hammered it into pieces to go in the trash (took almost a year to get rid of the whole thing).
 
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