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Gordon Low Products

Pond Liner manufacturer

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Water Gems Curved Water Features

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This is a central, circular pond with surrounding curved pools designed by Carolyn Grohmann of Secret Gardens.

 

Water Gems, the contractors are an Edinburgh based landscape and water features specialist. They have several prestigious awards to their name and are headed up by Nick Benge who made Water Gems one of  our first registered Firestone Installers.  After so many years’ practice Water Gems are now experienced enough to line just about anything.

 

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These lovely curved structures are lily ponds built into a slope so the first thing to do was terrace the part of the garden that was to take the pools.  Then the structure needed to be built with poured reinforced concrete and rendered block work walls.

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Nick says that Firestone PondGard is perfect for sealing the structure because it will accommodate small changes if the structures settle and any expansion or contraction due to temperature changes…. (The garden is just north of Edinburgh after all)

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These liners are fully adhered using Firestone Bonding Adhesive, then Splice Tape and Quick Prime Plus join the liners together. The Form Flash is applied to the detailed work and to provide a fully water tight seal throughout. All part of the Firestone QuickSeam system   (http://www.gordonlowproducts.co.uk/seaming.html)

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The pools had to be connected so that their water quality was consistent thereby making sure they didnt go different colours or behave differently.

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Nicks last problem was the large tree limb that overhung one of the pools and happened to be a roost for about twenty wood pigeons with predictable results underneath.  The only solution was to cut off the bough and having done that the pools are now clean and perfectly clear.

Water Gems are an Edinburgh based company founded in 1993.  They have a wealth of experience in Firestone Seaming and are one of our favoured installers.

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http://www.watergems.co.uk/

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http://www.secretgardensdesign.co.uk/

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www.gordonlowproducts.co.uk

 

 

Kingcombe Aquacare – 2016 RHS Chelsea Flower Show Garden Pond for Hillier Nurseries

The theme of ‘Hillier in Springtime’ is a celebration of spring-flowering trees and plants. Water cascades into a central body of water from three copper pipes set into a high grey gabion wall. Hillier Nurseries and Garden Centres have been involved in RHS Chelsea Flower Show from the early days and is the most successful exhibitor in the show’s history with a record 70 consecutive RHS Chelsea Gold medals.

images copyright Hillier Nurseries

With a new site at Chelsea this year, Hillier have opted for a new design by Sarah Eberle, the acclaimed garden designer and former Design Director of Hillier Landscapes.

The lining of the central water feature was entrusted to Kingcombe Aquacare, a long standing customer of Gordon Low Products, and we produced a bespoke 0.75mm SealEco Greenseal box-welded pond liner to a drawing they supplied.

image copyright Kingcombe Aquacare Ltd
Designed to fit perfectly within the hard construction built on-site at RHS Chelsea days before the show, so no room for error or delay…
images copyright Hillier Nurseries

The theme of ‘Hillier in Springtime’ is a celebration of spring-flowering trees and plants. Water cascades into a central body of water from three copper pipes set into a high grey gabion wall.

 images copyright Hillier Nurseries
 images copyright Hillier Nurseries
Boardwalks on two sides extend over the pool, whilst a grey pavilion frames the view over the garden.

Firestone Seaming System and Tailor Made Pond Liners

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Cornwall Ponds specified Firestone PondGard to line the sump for this swimming pond.
The vertical walls make this an ideal project for Firestone 1.02mm PondGard EPDM which is fully adhered to the wall using Firestone Bonding Adhesive.
The Quickseam Splice System allows water tight jointing on site.

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Firestone Quickseam splicing products form the best possible solution for field seaming, joining and repairing of EPDM Liner.

We can supply the full range of these products along with practical advice on all aspects of our Seaming System.

Seaming courses held at our Bedfordshire Factory will be starting in the near future and we will be emailing shortly with dates.

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Tailor Made Pipe Sleeves are made to order (minimum 100mm diameter). We fabricate these from EPDM and Butyl and they are applied to the liner using the QuickSeam system.

We also supply QuickSeam, Universal Pipe Sleeves (Moulded EPDM) for sealing around liner pipe penetrations and this comes complete with QuickSeam Tape already applied to the flange and a Stainless Steel clamp to secure the to the pipe.

Martin Kelley of Fairwater Ltd used our 1.00mm SealEco Greenseal EPDM for the Swimming Pond in the award winning M & G Garden at last year’s Chelsea Flower Show.fs4

Martin sent us over the template and we started with a 9m x 15m sheet which was then intricately welded to produce this lovely natural pond.

Given a good template, or for less complicated designs, accurate measurements we are able to pre-fabricate liners that fit like a glove and provide a fabulous focal point for any garden.

For more information please call Tom or Ruth on 01480 405433 or email

tom@gordonlowproducts.co.uk or ruth@gordonlowproducts.co.uk

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RHS Hampton Court Palace Flower Show 5 – 10 Jul 2016

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River cruise line creates Scandinavian-inspired garden as the new sponsor of the world’s largest annual flower show.

The RHS has announced that leading river cruise line, Viking Cruises, is headline sponsor of RHS Hampton Court Palace Flower Show. The partnership has developed over the last four years with Viking Cruises having a presence at both the RHS Chelsea and RHS Hampton Court Palace Flower Shows.

Return of the Water Garden category

Inspired by the new partnership, the 2016 show features the return of the popular Water Garden category after an eight-year absence. At this year’s show three gardens will be based on a water theme, including a debut design at the show by Viking Cruises.

The Viking Cruises Scandinavian Garden

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Inspired by the wild, natural beauty and their heritage, The Viking Cruises Scandinavian Garden beckons you across the water, to take a closer look. A rowing boat rests on a pebble beach where large boulders have been placed, as if left by a retreating glacier. A gravel path leads to the door of a humble house which nestles into an earth mound covered by meadow grass sparsely colonised with wildflowers. Nature is ever present in the form of sedges, ferns and grasses, while native trees and shrubs provide the backdrop. The garden evokes a traditional Scandinavian way of life where comfort and beauty is drawn from the simplest things. ( © The Royal Horticultural Society 2016)

About Stephen Hall Garden Design

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Stephen Hall Garden Design is run by award winning designer Stephen Hall. Stephen is the principal garden designer, with 25 years experience designing gardens, he is personally involved in the design of all gardens and planting schemes produced. Throughout his successful career, Stephen has designed a number of gardens at the Chelsea Flower Show and the Hampton Court Palace Flower Show and is among the privileged few designers to have won a Gold Medal at Chelsea. Other awards include Best in Show Award, People’s Choice Award, Gold Medal and Silver Gilt Medals.

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Gordon Low are proud to be the pond liner supplier for Stephen Hall Garden Design and have worked with them for many years now, supplying high quality pond liner for a number of award winning show gardens.

We look forward to watching this show garden come together at:

RHS Hampton Court Palace Flower Show 5 – 10 Jul 2016

 

 

Helping the Wildlife in our gardens

Helping the Wildlife in our gardens

Gardens contain multiple habitats which can be important for wildlife, perhaps the most important being a wildlife pond…

Installing a pond is quite possibly the biggest single contribution that can be made to increase the wildlife interest in a garden.

A correctly built pond can provide:
  • A breeding place for frogs, toads, newts, dragonflies and all the other aquatic fauna
  • A drinking and bathing area for birds and other animals

Remember to use a flexible pond liner and create a gentle sloping beach at one end to allow wildlife access in to and more importantly out of the water.

Don’t add fish to a wildlife pond as they will eat most of the smaller wildlife such as tadpoles!

Read more about Wildlife in gardens here: https://www.rhs.org.uk/advice/profile?pid=551

See how to build a small garden pond here: http://www.gordonlowproducts.co.uk/pond%20liner%20projects/aquajoy/project_aquajoy.htm

www.gordonlowliners.co.uk

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If you don’t have an iPhone or haven’t downloaded our pond liner app then try our new mobile website for a better user experience !

FORMAL PONDS AND WATER FEATURES

 

For a classic quality pond installation for a formal pond or water feature the best choice by far is a box welded pond liner from Gordon Low.

This prime example recently installed by a good customer of ours Richards Aquatics, just goes to prove how a formal water feature makes a garden or courtyard complete.

To see how box welded pond liners are made go to our website here..

For more inspiration try our pond liner project build gallery

Practical Fishkeeping magazine show how they used a Box Welded Pond Liner to give a new life to an existing brick garden feature.

Our ponds: Box of goodies

Copyright © Practical Fishkeeping

Nathan Hill and Jeremy Gay use a Gordon Low box welded liner to set up a step-by-step pond for a PFK colleague.

We’d had a pond ‘itch’ ever since the first sun of the year finally appeared and have been trying to find good reason to spend a day less desk-bound.

We wanted to get dirty fingernails and re-acquaint ourselves with the cold caress of water-soaked sleeves — so we treated our editorial assistant Nicki to a pond installation!

She had been eager to get one ever since she saw us playing with Blagdon’s Affinity pools and wanted something a step up from her own tiny water feature. So we knocked heads together to come up with a solution…

A reconnaissance revealed the perfect spot: a raised bed of bricks wasted with soil and a handful of plants. It was an ideal location in a south-west facing garden.

The spot was close to the house and water supplies and it already had electrical connections put in to supply Nicki’s water feature. All it needed was a liner, water, a filter and some plants.

Nicki got to task digging out the hole while we tracked down a liner — and this was the perfect opportunity to put one of Gordon Low’s box-welded liners into action as we’d been dying to do so for a while.

The hole had been measured at 155 x 75cm/60 x 30”, so we just had to decide on a depth to suit. We established that 45cm/18” would be a good compromise, giving us a water volume of 500 l/110 gal, but not making the pond so deep as to be unmanageable.

Box welded liners are superb for anyone with a formal shape to fill and companies like Gordon Low make them bespoke to order.

Given the 90° angles and sheer sides of our pond, we were adamant that we would avoid unsightly creases and folds, as well as not wasting liner. After all, a formal pond requires formal lines.

We opted for one of Blagdon’s all-in-one pond filters to avoid the sight of monolithic boxes around the edge of the pond, as well as for ease of use. This choice was fine by Nicki who tells us that the all-in-one is “a piece of cake to work with and easier to clean than my aquarium filter.”

Light maintenance
Several weeks on and Nicki loves the result. Her maintenance regime is frequent but light. Rather than letting muck build up she cleans the filter weekly, using pond water to clean the foams.

Planted up and housing three Sarasa comets and a canary yellow goldfish, Nicki is happy. The plants are bedding in and the fish have settled well, fast becoming bold enough to hand feed, despite the presence of cats and dogs!

The only potential setback was remedied early. Blanketweed appeared within the first two weeks, clinging tenaciously to the liner. Nicki removed it by hand and added some more plants. Since then it’s been algae-free!

See how this pond was created in 12 easy to follow steps…

1. The hole inside the 155 x 75cm brick bed was dug down, removing any fragments of sharp stone or glass on the way. A few worms were unearthed and rehomed as we found them!

2. After measuring out the underlay on the lawn it was folded to shape and used to line the pond. We deliberately used a little too much and opted to trim back any excess as needed.

3. The box-welded liner was measured on the lawn and checked over for any signs of tearing or punctures. The last thing we wanted was to install the pond and only then find a leak!

4. The liner was placed into the hole and the arduous task of lining up the edges began. With a custom-cut liner it’s important to make sure that all edges are flush to avoid stretching.

5. The liner was being continually worked into shape as the pond was slowly filled with water. This way any shifts in the supporting soil can be accounted for and any weak spots noted.

6. As we wanted to fill the pond with plants on the same day as installation it was necessary to use a dechlorinator. It’s good practice to use these chemicals early on when changing water.

7. We took Nicki plant shopping, and picked up an Equisetum, Caltha, Lobelia and Juncus marginal plants, as well as a pygmy lily and some oxygenators — plants we felt would provide just the right mix.

8. The plants were then repotted to allow for growth, using larger baskets with hessian liners. The plants were then added, along with extra soil, and the pots topped off with gravel to trap it all in.

9. The liner and underlay were trimmed into shape once we had the weight of the plants holding the corners in place. The edges were later sealed in place using Hutton Aquatic Supplies Gold Label pond sealer.

10. The lily was then repotted and added to the pond, along with the bunched oxygenators. Although some people like to pot oxygenators we chose to let ours float loose for this particular project.

11. The plug was connected to the pump/UV and the unit added. Given the narrow nature of the pond we opted to use a bell fountain which tends to lose less water to wind than a rose type.

12. Several weeks on and plants and fish have been added. The pond has been sealed at the edge, keeping the liner in place. Water was tested before each fish addition to check for ammonia and nitrite.

This article is reposted from an original source here: http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk/content.php?sid=5614

 

Fancy a swim?

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Now is the ideal time to start planning your new swimming pond for next summer!

How about a wildlife pond that is a vital natural habitat for wildlife but is also naturally filtered and so clear you can swim in it, that’s the idea behind a swimming pond

Our Firestone PondGard pond liners are tough enough for swimming ponds and the range of QuickSeam accessories such as termination systems and seaming products allow liners to be cut and joined on-site by trained installers.

Visit our website for more pond liner ideas and inspirational projects….

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