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By Rudy Nielsen |
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Over
the past 38 years I have built a number of small
lakes and they are much easier to build then you
would imagine. But why build your own lake in
the first place? Why not just buy a parcel of
land on an already existing lake? I found that
in all my years in the recreational real estate
business one of the most frequently asked
questions about a parcel of land is "has the
property got any water frontage on a lake or
river?" The majority of recreational properties
do not have water frontage because there are few
lake frontage properties available relative to
properties without water frontage. There are
both advantages and disadvantages to owning
lakefront properties.
Firstly, it is much more expensive to purchase
lakefront property, and the lake has to be
shared with other people and, in most cases,
neighbours are close enough that you could throw
a stone at their houses and hit them. |
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The cost of waterfront properties is
substantially higher then non-waterfront. Of
course there are advantages to being on a large
lake, such as trolling for fish, water skiing,
boating, sailing and a number of winter sports. So you
must weigh the pros and cons of paying that
extra money for lake frontage or building your
own lake. Also, remember, the majority of
properties that do have lake, river/creek
frontage are in valleys and not on top of hills
or mountains. A mountain property usually has
total privacy and fantastic views. If only it
had a lake! Anything is possible if you put
enough cash into it, so why not buy your dream
property for an affordable price and build your
own lake? |
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Two
of the biggest lakes I ever built both started
as small holding ponds no more then four feet
deep. The first pond was for some ducks to swim
around in so my two young sons could watch them,
and the other pond was built to hold trout for a
few months. I originally had in mind only one to
two hour projects for both ponds, intending to
build them 4 feet deep and 10 feet x 10 feet in
length and width. |
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The
first lake I built was at a small ranch I owned.
It was just out of town and we used it as a
weekend retreat. The ranch consisted of a small
2-bedroom house and a yard full of barns and
sheds. I had an old D6 cat that was used around
the place for odd jobs like keeping the road
snow plowed in and to spread gravel in the
summer. |
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Rudy's equipment building the
lake |
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Originally I had bought my two sons some ducks
but the plastic tub we had for them was not
large enough, so I decided I would get up early
the next morning and build a four-foot deep pond
for the ducks to swim around in. I got up at
daybreak next morning; well before anyone else
was up. I fuelled the "Cat" up and got ready to
start the pond. Deciding to locate the pond on
one side of the barnyard, I slowly drove over to
this spot, dropped my blade and started to work.
I built a 10 ft. x 10 ft. pond, 4 feet deep, in
one hour. I got off my |
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cat, jumped in the hole, and it just looked too
small, so decided I had to made it a little
bigger. And from there I just kept making it
bigger and bigger and bigger. I drove that cat
all day and through most of the night, only
stopping for a beer, a sandwich and supper. I
slept but a few hours and early the next morning
eagerly continued building the pond. |
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In
the end I had built a square moat around the
barnyard with an island in the middle! On the
island, before we dug the last bridge of dirt
away, we made a big mound for a rabbit hut,
complete with tunnels. It was great. I rented
two pumps and they worked for three days and
nights to fill the lake. My kids really enjoyed
the results and had great fun with their private
island and the attached small wooden bridge. The
private island also protected the rabbits and
ducks from any predators. |
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The
second lake I decided to build was much larger.
I used my own D6 again but hired other equipment
as well. The first thing I had to do was locate
a low spot in the terrain where water from the
surrounding hill would run. I found a swampy
area and small gullies running into this low
swampy area, so I determined that this was the
spot where water from the surrounding hills
collected. Next I needed to know whether my lake
would hold water and for how long. It would be
no use building a lake and filling it and then
having all the water drain out. To determine
this I used a hoe and had the operator dig down
as deep as possible and about a couple of
buckets wide. He went down about 16 feet. I then
put my two pumps to work and filled this hole
with water. On the side of the hole I marked the
water level by putting a stick in the side. I
left this overnight and checked the level next
morning. The water had gone down only a few
inches so I knew the hole would contain water,
especially when the sides had been in water
longer and were saturated. I now knew my pond
would hold water naturally and that I wouldn’t
have to use a rubber liner. This would have been
costly and would have made the pond much
smaller. |
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Lake building in process |
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Next,
my helpers and I got to work building a lake. We
used my D6 cat, a John Deere hoe and two dump
trucks. This is the most feasible way I found to
build a lake. We went straight down on one side
of the pond to make it very deep, while on the
other side we built a gradual slope to make it
shallower. This gradual slope was also used to
get the trucks in and out. The hoe would dig,
continually filling the truck; one truck would
load up, then drive out and empty into a low
spot a few hundred yards away. The other truck
in the meantime would be loading. I found this
combination worked best. We left a fairly large
island in the middle of our lake and went down
24 feet. I have never measured the lake, but it
is approximately 300 feet by 600 feet. |
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We
started in very loamy conditions, which I knew
maintained water, so as we were digging down, I
kept a constant watch on the sides of the hole
to make sure the soil condition didn’t change.
If we had hit one bucket of sand or gravel I
would have stopped immediately, and that would
have been the depth of my lake. |
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There
are two reasons to go down so deep when stocking
a pond with trout: one is because in winter time
you need to have lots of room under the ice for
the trout to maneuver, and two, in summer the
top of the lake gets warm and the trout can get
down to the cool water. |
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If
you want to have trout you need a permit from
the Department of Fisheries and to get this
permit you have to follow their specifications
for building a lake. The most important thing is
to make sure that, if you are close to another
waterway, none of your fish get out of the pond
and no wild fish get into it. We had to do this
because we built our pond right beside a large
lake. We installed a large eight-inch overflow
pipe to run out of the pond into a large wooden
holding tank. The pipe from the lake entered the
tank near the top and another eight-inch pipe
went out from the top of the tank to a large
ditch that drained into the lake. |
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When
we got down as far as we wanted to go, it was
time to get the machinery out and get some water
in. We owned two small wayjax pumps, and we
rented two more. It took just about a week to
fill the lake, running the pumps constantly day
and night. Once the lake was full even I was
surprised at how large it really was. We have
had this lake for eight years now and have never
yet had to add any water to it with pumps. The
winter snows replenish the lake every year and
summer rain showers help to maintain the water
level. |
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After
the pond was built I landscaped the entire area
around the pond with lawn and willow trees. The
willows provide shade for the trout and habitat
for mosquitoes and mayflies, which in turn fall
into the pond and become food for the tout.
Another nice feature is that, having the lake
out in the open, except for the willow trees
around the perimeter, the evening winds
naturally oxygenate the pond. Many a morning I
will take my coffee and sit by the pond on a
picnic table to watch the ducks and geese
swimming around. |
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Filling the lake with water |
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We
have yet to put any trout in this lake but to my
amazement, one early morning as I was taking a
walk, I sat down beside the lake watching the
ducks swimming around, when I noticed a school
of fish swimming in there. I know we never put
any fish into this lake, and I |
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know
they couldn’t have come up the pipes through the
trap or through three very fine filter screens,
so how did they get in there? The only way I can
possibly think of is that an eagle somehow
picked up a fish in the lake, dropped it into
our lake and that somehow the eggs hatched. Lo
and behold, fish. Two families did move into the
lake right away - one was a family of ducks that
built its nest on the island and the other was a
family of muskrats. Now, many years later, we
have many families of ducks and muskrats. |
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When
building a pond, be sure to have natural
drainage from both the snow run off and the
rainfalls. If I had not been able to utilize
natural run off, I would have drilled a well,
put in a pump and then just let it run to create
a natural waterfall over some rocks. |
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