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Posted
On 20/09/2019 at 11:33, difflock said:

Good Lord, tis indeed true that common sense is rather uncommon, and by that I mean that surely, based on your overhead image, common sense could have told the Council Inspector all he needed to know, like the height of the bund and its proportions/likely stability, and more pertinently is there anybody or anything downstream that could be damaged as a result of the bund failure and what was the max volume of likely bund failure discharge over what likely timespan.

Because my cursory inspection from your image cannot establish any likely catastrophic outcomes

They wanted cross sections of how the bund was constructed. A catastrophic failure in the thickest part would flood the house and possibly a couple of the neighbours. It has shown no signs of slumping/eroding and is massively thick at the base (the bottom of the pond being underground anyway). Anyway, they're satisfied with the construction, but the conditions they applied were totally unfair and, in my view, impossible to discharge, so I'm having to pay again to try and vary them. Still threatening with making me fill it in - not sure where all the wildlife or water is going to go...

 

It's stunning in the sunshine as you can see down about 6 feet now it's cleared. Level has dropped over the past couple of weeks due to no rainfall, by about 6 inches. Last year it was down 12 feet!

 

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  • Like 2

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Posted
21 minutes ago, monkeybusiness said:

Planning permission for a pond - what a ridiculous country we live in!!! 

It was the unauthorised engineering works they complained about. The fact they were part of a pond was incidental. That said, it has dragged on and on and is still costing me money

Posted

Your pond is looking great Marcus.

Sorry to hear your woes Spandit, you should get some kind of award, not a load of ballache! The fire brigade access thing gave me a good laugh though. It could be very useful for them to pump from, I suppose.

Good work Matthew.

Some really nice projects.

We dammed a tiny dyke when I was a nipper and made a pool big enough to canoe in.

That was before planning was invented, mind.

I love ponds.

  • Like 4
Posted
I didn't ask for planning permission beforehand so had to apply for retrospective permission. I've now got it (after a lot of reports and hassle), but they imposed a load of conditions on it, including getting a professional ecologist to do a report (which was a few hundred quid). I am now trying to vary/cancel the condition but will have to pay another £234 for the privilege - feels like extortion to me but the fee structure is clearly set out on the planning portal.


The reason it feels like extortion is that it is extortion.
Write to the head planning man at your local mafia. Tell him that you’ll soon be comprehensively servicing his wife and charging him £234 for doing so but that the fee structure is clearly set out on your website.
Posted

Mine filled up in a few months but then went right down again (and it's about 15 foot deep!), being almost completely dry the following Summer. I predicted that with all the fissures that had opened in the clay, there would be a massive amount of sediment washed in once the rains started again. It was full to overflowing by last December and despite dropping by a maximum of 6 inches this Summer, it's remained full so has obviously self sealed.

 

May take a few years but it there's clay in the soil, I reckon it will stay full

  • Like 2
  • 5 months later...
Posted (edited)

About a foot to go, fingers crossed, and how far it will drop during a druth is hard to know.

Still dithering re the outfall solution, I may simply strip the peat away, and use the underlying clay to construct a large/deep/wide channel over to the origonal pond(which then has its own outfall) this channel will in the worst case still be a "wetland" environment, even if the pond only overtops sporadically.

I also started thinning out the naturally seeded woodland, to let a bit more light in, only got Birch and Rowan, and Sally bushs aka Goat Willow hybrids.

A Log Cabin, where the blue chair is sitting, would be a long term goal, the 2nd image was taken from the chair, looking near-enough due North, but a lovely sheltery place to sit.

P.S.

I have just emerged from 3 months recuperation/winter hibernation,

as of this last 3 days, I feel like a new man!

But I  definately feel like an old stiff man in the evenings!

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Anyway 40 brown trout put in on Tuesday, and a few images from this morning.

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Edited by difflock
  • Like 8

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