Monday, December 13, 2010

An appreciated enewsletter from California


Those of us in the Upper Midwest and Great Lakes are out plowing snow or planning for the coming season. A storm walloped us this past weekend with ferocious winds, frigid temperatures and snow. Lots of snow.

So, getting a enewsletter from California showing an incredible garden was welcome. The enewsletter from Madrone Landscape also offered us some great information about water use, an issue that's growing in importance for our industry.

With greater urgency we’ve been researching and writing about water issues and how they’re affecting our landscape industry. Mostly we’ve focused on irrigation, the act of applying water to green living landscapes under our care.

But, that’s just part of the urban landscape water picture. The other equally important part is runoff. How do we keep storm water from overloading our treatment systems or flushing pollutants into our waterways?

Landscape professionals do clients and their communities an awesome service when they design and install landscapes that capture and use rainwater on site, assuming, of course, the design does not create drainage problems for structures or neighboring properties.

Writes Josh Carmichael, construction division manager at Madrone Landscapes in Atascadero, CA, in the company’s latest newsletter: “ Rainwater harvesting is quickly becoming a smart trend nationwide as people are looking to save money, protect water bodies, or keep their wells from drying up. There are many ways, simple to complex, to store rainwater for future irrigation use or allow it to infiltrate directly into the ground in a rain garden or bioswale.”

In Madrone’s market, a non-profit known as SLO Green Build will be releasing a guide on rainwater harvesting soon, he writes. This is a follow up guide to its Graywater guide released last year.

“These are both great ways to irrigate your garden with a local, free, environmentally friendly water source year round,” writes Carmichael, who is principal of Carmichael Environmental Consultants.

“Locally, SLO Green Build, a non-profit environmental construction coalition, is due to release a guide on rainwater harvesting strategies for county residents later this month. This is a follow up guide to complement their Graywater guide released last year. These are both great ways to irrigate your garden with a local, free, environmentally friendly water source year round.” — Ron Hall

3 comments:

Rainwater harvesting systems said...

Rainwater harvesting is mandatory in many parts of India including Bangalore. It is also due to become mandatory for new buildings in the UK in the very near future.

Sewage Treatment Plant Systems said...

Rainwater is free, clean and a sustainable resource. Why waste it when it takes 280 watts of electricity to purify every litre of mains water to potable standards which we then use to flush toilets.

Andrew said...

Some would think that the SE is immune to water shortages, but as a landscape designer and installer in Birmingham, AL I can tell you that we also have been hard hit over several of the last ten years I have been in Birmingham.

Everyone should practice water stewardship. It makes no sense to take very highly treated drinking water and using it on our yards and gardens when other alternatives are available such as sufficient topsoil, water saving plants, mulch and storm water collection systems.