It started, as many good ideas
do, with my next door neighbour.
“A
great way to spice up your garden,” he told me, “is to add a fountain.”
Now,
this is the same neighbour who once told me that “a little pruning” would take
ten minutes and ended up requiring three tools, two bandages, and a strong cup
of coffee. As always, I approached his advice with… cautious optimism.
But
then he invited me over.
There
he was, sitting on a bench in his backyard, book in hand, looking like he’d
just stepped out of a retirement brochure. And beside him? A gently bubbling
fountain. Not flashy, not over-the-top, just enough water flowing to make the
whole place feel calm, peaceful… almost suspiciously serene.
“Listen
to that,” he said.
I
did.
And
I’ll admit it; he had a point.
There’s
something about the sound of water that makes you slow down. Your shoulders
drop a little. Your mind quiets. Even if you’re not into meditation, yoga, or
anything that involves sitting cross-legged and saying “mmm,” the effect sneaks
up on you.
It’s
like your garden suddenly whispers, “Relax… the weeds can wait.”
Now,
I always assumed adding a fountain was one of those projects best left to
professionals with large trucks and even larger invoices. But my brother
assured me it wasn’t nearly as complicated, or expensive as I thought.
“Minimal
maintenance,” he said confidently.
Which,
in gardening terms, usually means “you’ll only have to worry about it
occasionally instead of constantly.”
Still,
I was intrigued.
So,
like any sensible person, I started with the most important step: imagining how
good it would look without actually doing anything yet.
Eventually,
reality caught up, and I had to think about choosing a fountain.
This,
it turns out, is where things can go sideways.
You
can’t just pick any fountain and plunk it down in your garden like an
afterthought. It has to fit. Blend in. Look like it belongs there, like it’s
been quietly bubbling away for years, not something you wrestled out of a box
last Saturday afternoon.
My
neighbour, who knows his limitations, solved this brilliantly. He took a picture
of his garden to the store.
Smart
man.
Armed
with that photo, he managed to find a rock-style fountain that looked like it
had been custom-designed for his space. It didn’t scream for attention. It
just… worked.
Of
course, no good project goes completely smoothly.
His
garden, as it turns out, is not conveniently located next to a power outlet. A
small detail, but an important one when your fountain depends on electricity to
do its “fountain-like” things.
This
is where I expected the story to end in frustration.
Instead, he talked to someone at a local garden center, who introduced him to the concept of a buryable extension cord. Yes, apparently this is a thing.
There he was, a few hours later, digging a trench across his yard like a man on a quiet mission. Not exactly glamorous, but effective. The cord disappeared underground, the fountain came to life, and the garden remained blissfully free of anything that looked like a tripping hazard.
Problem solved.
And
the result?
Well,
let’s just say his garden now has… presence.
It’s
no longer just a place with plants. It’s a place you go to sit, think, read, or
enjoy a moment without the noise of everything else. The fountain doesn’t
dominate the space; it completes it.
Meanwhile,
back at my place, I found myself looking at my own garden and thinking, “You
know… we could use a little bubbling confidence over here.”
Because
that’s really what a fountain adds.
Not
just sound. Not just movement.
It
adds a feeling.
It
turns a garden from “that area where things grow” into “that place where I
actually want to spend time.”
If
you’ve been thinking about trying something new, something that adds a bit of
character, a bit of calm, and maybe even a bit of quiet pride when someone
visits, consider a fountain.
Start
simple. Pick something that fits your space. Don’t be afraid to ask for advice
(or borrow a good idea from a sibling who’s already done the trial and error).
And
if it involves a little digging along the way, well… think of it as part of the
story you’ll tell later.
Preferably while sitting beside your very
own fountain, book in hand, wondering why you didn’t do it sooner.