Jump to content
  • entries
    21
  • comments
    156
  • views
    15477

Water management solution and completion


Jenki

949 views

My initial plans were to have rainwater harvesting, build hub taught me no.. so with that scrapped I needed an alternative, soakaways are difficult due to bed rock levels. In addition to this we have lots of run off on the croft, and the track to the house floods.

We have already installed a pond for the ducks and this has a large berm to the back and sides so that the runoff is held back and slowly soaks away, but this winter has proved it overflows regularly, that's around 3000L extra. So the plan was to install an overflow pipe from this pond to a new larger pond. The larger pond also acting as rainwater run off capture.

The larger pond will have 2 levels, a pond and then an extra layer to act as a overflow that can evaporate and or be pumped to the rubble drain in drier times.

I got a big carried away with the backhoe and ended up with around 10M x 8M and over a meter deep. The overflow capacity will be around 30k - 35k L.

We had to peck out some of the rock to get depth, and at the front used "as dug" rock from the quarry to form a rough and rugged stone wall, quite in keeping in Caithness. Time will heal the scars and soften the edges with planting.

 

IMG_20240324_135018.jpg.b97584ac9806a84791c49522d0fb32e9.jpg

 

IMG_20240324_134946.jpg.c38e3de9bd37e3a21150222b6a8520ce.jpg

Due to the two levels we came up with the idea of hiding the liner under some camo net, that we intend to plant up in time. Not sure how this will stand the test of time.

 

From the house the rainwater enters a rock filter, an idea loosely based on a post from @ToughButterCup- thanks.

From the rock filter we have created a little stream that the rainwater will flow down and into the pond. In addition to this we have a pump that will take the water via a home made skimmer from the pond and filter the water from the pond through the rock filter and stream constantly. This also has a diverter to pump the water past the house and into the field to reduce the overflow capacity in drier times.

IMG_20240324_135106.thumb.jpg.88365bb2c34d184b65b5bab3b553075a.jpg

 

IMG_20240324_135144.thumb.jpg.0385f62da7b97d09a2a8a0341ee8a594.jpg

This is the rock filter, and some of the pipework yet to be buried. Getting to this stage ticked a box for building control as we now handle our run off. 

 

 

We got our completion certificate on the house this week, yeah. There are some things to finish, the second bedroom needs decorating and trim work. And a few small jobs here and there, but in general the house is decorated, and fully functioning.

We started the build in earnest around May 23 I think, so quite pleased with the effort and timescale we achieved. It's was built by me and Mandy with the odd person helping with concrete pours. 3 months in summer were busy with the cabin rentals that saw Mandy spend 3-4 hrs a day turning them around for the endless NC500 travellers.😁

 

We're embarking on the VAT reclaim soon.

To summarise the build:

89sqm True bungalow

Floor 0.094U (300mm EPs 120mm concrete)

Walls 0.139U  ICF with 50mm EWI and 25mm PIR IWI

Cold roof 0.1U 25MM PIR 400MM mineral wool.

UPVC triple glazed windows and composite doors

MVHR, 4kW PV in roof, 5kW ASHP, UFH.

EPC A103, Airtightness 0.83 ACH.

 

 

  • Like 8

6 Comments


Recommended Comments

3 hours ago, Alan Ambrose said:

Wow congrats. And a pond big enough for ducks.

We have 8 Muscovy and 5 call ducks. The Muscovies have already been swimming.👍

Link to comment
14 hours ago, Jenki said:

The Muscovies have already been swimming

Like ducks to water then

 

duckling10.jpg

  • Like 1
Link to comment

After some snow and heavy rain, I can see my design in action, physics doing what physics does.

IMG_20240327_094751.thumb.jpg.c03dcc9e711c0b2dce225dd5db930dce.jpg

 

This is the 1st pond that has now overflowed with run off. This level has raised about 400mm.

Although not finished. This has now overflowed into a gulley / pipe, that when it's finished will be concreted and form a better overflow outlet.

 

 

IMG_20240327_094805.thumb.jpg.2c55303029edc8f93639f5426d8943b5.jpg

The last pic is the new pond and the darker green shade in the water is the overflow water entering the pond. The new pond rose around 150mm so around 1500l. 

IMG_20240327_094824.thumb.jpg.a516fb304dffa78c871076d6bb53992b.jpg

 

  • Like 2
Link to comment

Fantastic! This is something like my ambition for our rainwater management, just on a slightly smaller scale, and with rainbox planters as the very first stage of the rainwater's journey from guttering to pond. I shall be using your picture of your miniature stream to demonstrate to HWMBO my stream plan!

  • Like 1
Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...