Thank YouHello. This is just beautiful!
10
Don’t miss out on the best deals of the season! Shop now 🎁
Thank YouHello. This is just beautiful!
10
It is NEVER a good idea to involve the State of New York in any part of one's property management. My little bog and overflow might well be tagged as a wetland by DEC even though it is artificial. The pond itself would involve a permitting process and the envisioned creek would likely be regulated being as close to the Snook Kill as it is. The State of New York would enrich themselves with literally 1000's of my dollars for what amounts to a puddle that has carefully been designed to avoid any leakage from my property and actually improves the wildlife habitat while doing no damage to nature. NYS is a meddlesome nanny that thinks it always knows best. I could tell you some hair raising stories from the days we had a camp on Trident Pond in the Tupper Lake Region in the heart of the Adirondack Park. Thanks, but no Thanks.Nice looking goldfish! I was just looking at New York's baitfish regulations. They're a bit confusing, and I would call the game and fish and ask to talk to a fisheries biologist before I did anything, but the "green list" in the regs contains many species that would be interesting, beautiful, and probably thrive in your pond...and they'd be a whole lot better at avoiding predators than those goldfish, too.
It's been 40 years since I last heard that sayingI do not pretend to be an expert, (Expert -- X is an unknown quantity and spurt is a drip under pressure ), so my thinking may be incorrect.
Do not misunderstand me ….. Some regulation is necessary to protect community space. Far to often, at least in N Y, we have city folk with alphabet behind names who develope rules without applying common sense.what the government doesn't know, won't hurt them. up yours govment fellas.