Dogsbody
Hire yourself a skip and a mini-digger for a weekend - even if you have never operated one before, a couple of hours and you'l be like a pro - trust me. They are easy to hire, most are self drive though the hirer will show you how to operate them. Then you can scrape off all the weeds and rubbish, and level the site using the ditching bucket, and then dig your pond using normal bucket, and utilise your spoil from the pond to either create banks or heap the soil up to use elsewhere at a later date.
Skip hire is not prohibitively expensive. Up here you pay a flat rate for the hire (about £60). The cost comes in what you put into it. If you just put rubble, subsoil etc in it, again up here you get charged £2/tonne, but if you mix it with household rubbish (old carpets etc) the cost shoots up to £40/ tonne, as it all has to go to landfill, whereas the rubble will probably be kept by the skip company and sold on as infill for new build houses etc.
Only thing to be careful about when digging your pond, or anything more than 12" deep is to be aware of the routes of your services - electric, water, gas and phone - burst them and the cost gets astronomical - only gas is really dangerous - electric is too but if the digger bursts a cable, all you get is a big bang and a bigger fright!
Hire yourself a skip and a mini-digger for a weekend - even if you have never operated one before, a couple of hours and you'l be like a pro - trust me. They are easy to hire, most are self drive though the hirer will show you how to operate them. Then you can scrape off all the weeds and rubbish, and level the site using the ditching bucket, and then dig your pond using normal bucket, and utilise your spoil from the pond to either create banks or heap the soil up to use elsewhere at a later date.
Skip hire is not prohibitively expensive. Up here you pay a flat rate for the hire (about £60). The cost comes in what you put into it. If you just put rubble, subsoil etc in it, again up here you get charged £2/tonne, but if you mix it with household rubbish (old carpets etc) the cost shoots up to £40/ tonne, as it all has to go to landfill, whereas the rubble will probably be kept by the skip company and sold on as infill for new build houses etc.
Only thing to be careful about when digging your pond, or anything more than 12" deep is to be aware of the routes of your services - electric, water, gas and phone - burst them and the cost gets astronomical - only gas is really dangerous - electric is too but if the digger bursts a cable, all you get is a big bang and a bigger fright!
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