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Thursday, 9 February 2012

Garden Fountains - Find out how to Winter Proof Your Fountain

By Cameron Randall


Outdoor garden fountains offer natural beauty to any home or landscape. It serves as both conversational accessories and also bathing locations for birds. Proper maintenance is recommended so that your fountain can last for decades. Outdoor garden fountains in climates that has below freezing temperatures must be winterized to prevent them from cracking as well as sustaining large damage.

This could be vitally important for fountain owners to remember as most of them like to spend the winter in a southern area of the country and then leave their houses unattended all through the winter season. Others take winter vacations for several weeks and then return home with freezing pipes. Busted frozen pipes may occur in a matter of a 24-hour duration of freezing temperatures. Protecting your exterior water features within the harsh winter conditions only takes a few minutes as well as a small preparation. This would prevent you from having a huge expense to mend your frozen pipes.

The most frequent inquiries we come across is what to do with a garden fountain or equipment in locations where freezes are normal. The right winter care is important for all cast stone, fiberglass, ceramic, and also terra cotta products to keep them from the freeze-thaw cycles which often occur during the winter. Any kind of garden fountain or statuary which could carry water, snow, or even ice, just like a planter or birdbath can be affected with the winter freeze-thaw cycle.

Fall brings several outdoor gardening tasks such as raking leaves, washing and putting away gardening tools in addition to setting up your pond or garden fountains for the cold temperature which is coming up next. If you have a concrete or cast stone water fountain and stay in a freezing location the ideal recommendation will be to empty it, get rid of the pump and then get everything inside right before the first freeze of the season. Cold weather trigger cement to expand and also contract that can make cement to crack, especially when there is water inside your garden fountains. Don't add antifreeze in your garden fountains since it is dangerous to children, pets and also wildlife.

Take away any kind of plants from the garden fountains using gloves. If left to expire in the winter months, the plants could rot and may even damage the fountain's lining. Fish, typical in a lot of exterior fountains, can be moved to an indoor tank or kept in the water to hibernate. Minimize their diet so that they will become familiar with the cold weather and absence of food. Remove all water from the fountain and disconnect the fountain pump. Take the pump indoors and clean it. Wash off any algae in the casing. Get a used toothbrush and then clean out the water intake vents on the edges of the pump. Pull away any organic dirt. Keep the cleaned pump inside a bucket of water stored in a warm place in which the water would not freeze all throughout winter. This would keep the gaskets and seals inside the pump from drying out before it is hooked back up to the outdoor fountain in the spring.




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