Water features in the garden

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My New Outdoor (Homemade) Fountain! | NEW WATER FOUNTAIN! I recently found an old water trough that would have been in a nearby town, and I instantly had the vision of turning it into a water... | By Wyse Guide | Well, hello friends. Today is all about taking simple store ingredients different than a recipe but at home and things that we can get in any kind of big box store. In this case, copper piping to create a fountain for an antique piece I had. So, I found an antique horse trough that I've been actually looking for for a long time. I saw this form years ago at a museum and I've really been wanting one because I've always thought it would make the perfect fountain. It's super heavy late 1800s cast iron horse trough that actually would have watered horses in a really close town but what I'm doing is creating a really simple kind of rustic but also modern fountain to be able to put in here. So, I've gone through different iterations trying to figure this out over the weeks and I want to make sure I brought to you the best form of it. So, what it's going to be is a copper fountain somewhat like this. So, I know my sizing and everything and really what I did to figure out the sizing was obviously know the inside of my trough. It's not too deep but I wanted to be able to have this fit in here so it could attach to a pump and then push out water on three places that is all just copper piping fitted together. So, we're going to go through all these steps today, kind of explain how I got here and really show you that it starts with really simple things. So, I have em right here behind me. I have copper pipes. Really simple. I have a whole bunch of fittings so we can kind of go through the steps and you can know what fittings I'm using, why I'm using it, and how I brought it all together. So, really in the beginning for me, it was figuring out what size was able to fit in this trough. My trough slopes on the side. So, I knew I needed something that would be able to sit up in a that a pump could fit in with it and any piping could go underneath it as needed. So, I'm really going off my template here and really the first time I did it worked. I just had to know my overall size of what fit down in the trough and started from there. So, I'm going to start by cutting these centerpieces which again, this sizing can change for if you have any type of trough or structure. You can even do a single, just a single pop up if you want to to create a bubbler out of copper. So, I'm using a really small little pipe cutter. You can get bigger ones too. I find this one can somewhat start to dent the copper pipe so I'm just going to use the smaller one which you can adjust to size I have it cut a little line right on here where I want to cut so I just measured and then I'm going to put my blade right up to it and then you just tighten it around it it's actually I've never I had never used one of these really for a long time before I was doing this and what's nice is it's really easy for at home because all you're doing is tightening it around so this is really the same process that you would do if you were doing it you know for actual piping and but we're just going to take it and we're going to tighten it so there's a little bit of grip to it and then you just start turning your pipe or the pipe cutter around this and it starts by just scoring a really small line and then every time you get there, you make a little turn to make it tighter and that blade keeps getting work deeper and deeper until you make it tight enough that when you turn it, it just pops off. So, this is why it's so easy at home to do it. This is super inexpensive. You can find a small pipe cutter like this and honestly, That's how quick it is. So, I just need to make a few pieces like this to know these are what's going in between these, cut some smaller ones for the sides and then we can just put it all together. I just got all of them cut. Now, what you of course can do at different points if you want to. Start dry fitting them together. So, obviously me, I needed three pieces to have these ups. This is what the bubblers going to be. I need pieces obviously to connect them and then I have different like T put not T post but tees and elbows and end caps for how I need it. Now, you can always just sit and dry fit them without any type of permanence to it and you can see this is how I started figuring out the sizing I was going to need was by dry fitting them together setting them inside and that's how I arrived at my sizes so if you know the measurements of what you're going for you know really what I'm basing this on is ones I'm inspired by right now there is this beautiful I feel like plethora in certain areas of these limestone antique troughs from Europe when I was on vacation California I saw so many of them and they had this copper fitting fountains that were made to go inside of them so this is my creation of that version a really low cost like we're talking well under $100 for all this stuff which is what I really like so now we have to worry about how to put it together and how to keep it water tight because as a fountain you want it to be water tight the big thing usually is copper is soldered when you're going to use it in the house or if you're going to use it for water pipes I'm not going to solder it out here but what I did find and what it works really well is liquid solder I know I mean this is not a sponsored pose this is just something I found online that has been working really well and it's pretty much access a glue or a liquid that can create an airtight and watertight seal on copper and really to put it together. It's pretty simple. So, I'm going to show you here with a couple before I just do it all. What I find works best and what it says to do is when you take a piece that you want to start putting together is you want to just rough it a little bit with some kind of gritty sandpaper and you can see copper is so soft that right away you get a little bit of just an abrasive edge there. It really doesn't take much at all and you know, each time it's going to be a little different depending what you can pipes if you want to. You can do really anything that works. So, what I'm going to do is open it. You need a very thin, thin layer is all and just kind of a nice line of it. So, I'll show you how quickly I just turn it as I'm going. Put a nice little line on it and it looks like it's not going to like it wouldn't do much but this has been working so well. So, then I take one of my first joints I want to make. So, this is going to be with a tea and I put it in. You just want to twist it around a little bit. See how you can already see it's coating all around that joint. Then, I let this sit for about 2 minutes just to set this joint before I keep moving. Now, you can do multiple ones and let them sit as you're going and I try to do it over like here. I have a little piece of cardboard, put a tarp down if you want to. I don't wouldn't want it to stain concrete or flagstone or anything like that or just do it somewhere else but now, I'm going to let this joint just set slightly and then keep going until I have multiple put together. So, as I'm getting close to getting it put together, the one thing I do make sure since I'm having three places where there's a bubbler, I want them to all be in line so they're looking level and correct I think that's the big thing. You don't want one to be off. So, you do have to pay attention as you're putting it piece by piece together. I'm just putting my other, I don't think I rough this one up yet. I'm just putting my other side now kind of leg or support on and again, these are cut just to size so they fit within the confines of the tubs kind of shape of this trough. You know, a trough like this is a weird shape because it has a rounded like a literal bathtub would has a rounded shape at the bottom which isn't quite easy as just a square trough would be. So, when I see those antique limestone winds, I would say there's a little bit more of a simplicity to putting those together then this one probably had but that's okay. We do things that sometimes are hard and that's just how it is. So, dry fitting it first is a good way to double check what you're doing. This one, I did dry fit so I know it will fit. I just need to get it now on there correctly and twist it so that glue is correct and then what I like to do is set it on a level surface and say okay well that's not level and make sure I can get in there and make it level because you want it to sit there correctly so this is drying obviously now and each one of these joints still is slightly drying I don't like to you know have it before it's really totally dry so I'll set it up on something even in between each joint now you're probably wondering why is there an opening here no opening there we're going to talk about that in a little bit when I put it finally together but you can see there's a continual tube here we're going to talk about that now learning experience for me and something you had to kind of go back to physics and I'm not going to say I remember physics at all from the classes I took but it helps me remember why physics probably is important to know more about so what I'm going to do is finish by putting my three pieces that are cut to size again for my bubblers and they're going to go in each one of these they're going to dry fully once we're done and then really it's just compiling it all together with the pump inside of the fountain and showing you how it really works so this has been drying for a few hours and that's just because I want those joints to set as much as they can obviously now that liquid solder I'm not going to say you should always use it for indoor projects. I don't know much about it other than it works great for DIY outdoor projects where water leaking walls are an issue. This is for a fountain so it works really well for this and you can see Kip loves it. That's the important part here. Now, what I'm doing is something that looks kind of odd. When I was testing this and researching it to get even or as close to even pressure as you can throughout the three. It may not always be perfectly even. You need a big pump to start with because you're doing three out for that pump but you also need to have what's called a continuous loop for that water and pressure to keep going through. That's going to help be more even. You know, when I when I was working and testing with it. I tried it with just all closed ends and going in at one point, it was always low on not the one you would think but a different one. So, this continuous loop really helps and then what I do is I have a center where I'm just going to put a T post. Now, Kev, I know you want to show them too but you just come over here and sit by me. Good job and I'm going to show you the tee I'm going to put in so out right here this joint you can see these two come together and what I need to do is just make sure this tee is going to fit in there and make it be somewhat flat or about even so I'm going to cut a little bit off of them and this I'm just using my outdoor pruners here it just cuts through and you can just keep doing this to size make sure you could measure but as long as you're going the right length and what I'm doing is just sticking this in and you can see it's a tight you want to make sure you have all the right fittings that fit the tight pipe you're doing so now I just need one that's going to connect to the pump now again my is tub shaped. So, there is a gap underneath this and that is why I'm allowed to go underneath it with my connecting pipe to the pump and I'll show you that here. We'll just dry fit everything together over there so you can see that. I'm going to put it all together here and now, let's take it over. I'm going to talk about the pump too. So, if we look over here, mine happens to have a drainage hole right in the bottom. That's wonderful because not only is it going to be easy to clean out, it also makes it really easy me to hide the cord which I'll show you but if you notice when this is sitting here see how there's room underneath that's perfect that I can take this over to the pump that way so when you want to and then this works in a lot of nice garden center fountains too when you don't see a cord it means you have to somehow hide it out the bottom so what you use for that it's really easy to find this online is just a little cord suction stopper so what this does is it goes around the standard cord it's a little piece silicone stopper. You fit it around the cord and then what allows you to do is take which you can see fountain cords. They're always so long in case you need to go really far but you can just stick it down the hole which for me is perfect since this was a trough. It obviously always kind of needed a drain but then what we're going to do is just pull through all of our cord and when we get to that stopper, that's going to create a water-tight seal. So, it's really perfect for any type of fountain when you have a hole like this. So, you just you can get different sizes of these but what you do is you keep pressing it in until it is as tight as it will go you can even tell this cord won't even push through and in the winter when I want to winterize this or anytime I want to clean it since it's nice and shallow I can clean it pretty quickly you pull this out the water drains out you pull your pump through and you're good to go so what we're going to do is just set this all up now I'm going to set this right in here going to see where everything goes now notice my pump is pretty big but everything in here is black so once the water is in here it really blends in what I do want to do see, it may just work for me to cut a little bit off of that pipe yet. So, I'm just going to cut a little bit of this. Honestly, maybe even an elbow eventually would kind of be nice there. And remember the reason we're going with a big pump which looks extra big is because we have all three of these we want to make sure we feed you can try different sizes see what works for you but what now I'm going to do see how easily this all fits together and can be winterized so nice I can take this all out store it away and it won't freeze I'm going to get my hose and we're filled up Moment of truth, we're going to turn it on. Now, I do have a heavy-duty extension cord coming to it that I will bury slightly in the mulch but all that is easy to be winterized and that's what I really like about this and I can hide everything underneath here because since there is a drain, there's an opening here in the back that you can hide all the cords under and it just kind of works well. You can also just check if it's water tight by going in underneath and double checking where it's actually landing and make sure that it's dry. So, I'm going to go in, plug it in and hope for the best friend It's pretty good. That is pretty good. So, do you see how even though we have a really big pump and by the way, if you want to know what size pump, we have an 800 gallon per hour pump. To me, that is a massive pump. I would have never thought I needed for three of these and this is at full blast. You can actually regulate the amounts to flow and it's at full blast and you would think it'd be a lot higher but this is to me just perfect because I do live, you can hear it out in the open area. That means I also get wind. So, I don't want this to be so tall and shoot so high that the windows going to blow it out. I want the sound of water five windows open or if I'm out but I want it to be low enough that it just stays contained which you can see it's not splashy. Now, it's looking really beautiful. This to me is so exciting. So, I love when I can create something out of something I already have or want to collect and that's this antique cast iron trough. You know, I have created other fountains both at my house or at the moms across the road and to me, it's always satisfying but it takes a little bit of know how and over the years, all these little tips and tricks have really made a difference knowing the right stoppers to use. Um in this case, no how to use copper so it looks really slightly professional and slightly like the ones I've been seeing that I like but also something that will patina and age with time but can be winterized very easily so I hope this gives you somewhat of a step-by-step process of how I'm putting this one together and how you can possibly utilize it in any capacity for something you want whether it's a single bubbler a multi bubbler or something that will just work in your garden because you know what gardens take time they evolve over time but when we add this little touches that are really they become special. So, enjoy. I'm going to clean up and totally enjoy this because it's working. That's the beauty of it.