I have been taking rain garden workshops from East Multnomah Soil & Water Conservation District, so I like to think I sort of know what I am doing. My yard is more or less a blank canvas of weeds and crab grass. Sounds terrible? Not at all! This is an opportunity to let my imagination run wild. My first project will be a couple of rain barrels plumbed into rain gardens. There is actually a lot of planning that goes into engineering a rain garden. First, I drew a layout of my house and property and calculated the area (sq/ft) of roof draining into each down spout. Then, I took 10% of the total area and that is how many square feet my rain garden will have to be.
After drawing everything out we dug a one foot by one foot hole and filled it with water a couple of times and timed how fast the water drained out. If it drains out too slowly or not at all then a rain garden is not for you. To our luck the soil was fabulous draining at about an 6 inches an hour in the back yard and 12 inches an hour in the front yard. That is fast draining soil! However, in an actual Pacific Northwest rain event complete soil saturation will likely cause a slower drainage rate.
My goal is to have the gardens finished by the end of February. I will post the progress over the next couple of months. The next step is to draw out the individual beds and select the plants.
That's pretty cool!
ReplyDeleteI should tell David about this...this sounds like something he would totally be into doing in our yard.
ReplyDeletePortland utilities gives you credits on your bill for doing it too.
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