G
Guest
·I'm building a large viv and want some of my waterfalls to have more of a "laminar" or "sheet" look where higher water volume drops horizontally over a wide area (say a foot or so) in place of the usual small streams and drips. To do this the horizontal step of the waterfall needs to be perfectly level so that the entire shelf of rock lets water flow over it.
Anyway, it seems a good material for this is the recent building product "Hardiplank" which is a 3/8" thick cement board that can be cut and drilled with woodworking tools. It's similar to the 1/2" cement board now used on bathroom floors and walls, but thinner and more flexible. It's used a lot as a stucco base in new construction.
I'd like to use hardiplank in a series of steps and risers of the waterfall and use the recycled "trex" decking material for support posts, assembled with stainless steel screws. Then I'd cover it with slate to look natural, although the vertical risers of the "steps" would still be hardiplank to prevent gaps that endanger frogs.
Has anyone done a waterfall like this? It will be a lot lighter and quicker than a stone base and will be a lot easier to keep level for the sheet flow I'd like to see, whereas stone tends to settle over time. It will require a higher volume pump, which is not a problem. I pretty confident that the cement board and trex decking are both inert, without leaching of toxins. Hopefully this will be in place for the Mid Atlantic Dendro club meeting in a couple weeks.
Thanks in advance for any advice.
Dave Willmore
Anyway, it seems a good material for this is the recent building product "Hardiplank" which is a 3/8" thick cement board that can be cut and drilled with woodworking tools. It's similar to the 1/2" cement board now used on bathroom floors and walls, but thinner and more flexible. It's used a lot as a stucco base in new construction.
I'd like to use hardiplank in a series of steps and risers of the waterfall and use the recycled "trex" decking material for support posts, assembled with stainless steel screws. Then I'd cover it with slate to look natural, although the vertical risers of the "steps" would still be hardiplank to prevent gaps that endanger frogs.
Has anyone done a waterfall like this? It will be a lot lighter and quicker than a stone base and will be a lot easier to keep level for the sheet flow I'd like to see, whereas stone tends to settle over time. It will require a higher volume pump, which is not a problem. I pretty confident that the cement board and trex decking are both inert, without leaching of toxins. Hopefully this will be in place for the Mid Atlantic Dendro club meeting in a couple weeks.
Thanks in advance for any advice.
Dave Willmore