[Christina Russin, Senior Lecturer, Biological Sciences, Northwestern University]
Hi, for those of you who don’t know me, I’m Chris Russin. I’m the program chair for our Master Gardener talks for this year and I would like to introduce our speakers for this evening. We are tag-teaming tonight. We have two presenters. They are both Master Gardeners from our own organization. The first person who’s going to talk is Krista Hothe Pfeiffer, and she’s going to talk about her experiences establishing a rain garden and give you, kind of intro – introductory materials about that. And then, Margie Hannes is going to take over and finish up with her rain garden that is more mature. Okay? So, that – we’ll start with Krista and then we’ll finish up with Margie.
[Krista Pfeiffer, Master Gardener, Racine/Kenosha Master Gardener Association]
I think I’m less mature than Margie, too.
[laughter]
Okay, hi, I’m – Im Krista Hothe Pfeiffer, and I just – before we get started I wanna set some expectations. I wanna tell you who I am and who I am not. I am not a professional landscaper, professional landscape architect, an installer; I’m not a botanist, I’m not a horticulturalist, or an engineer, and I am definitely not a professional speaker. You guys are scaring me big time here. So, you’ll experience that, and I apologize, but hopefully we’ll just keep plugging along. I like the topic. I’ll tell you who I am.
I am an enthusiastic gardener. I am an advocate for using native plants in business landscapes as well as in your home gardens, and I am a steward of the Earth, which to me means that it’s my responsibility to leave my corner – my small corner of – of the Earth a little bit better than the way I found it.
I’m also an accidental rain gardener, and I’ll tell you how that all happened as we go through the presentation.
[slide titled, What is a rain garden, featuring a photo of Kristas rain garden and the following definition – It is a shallow depression in your yard, planted with native plants and grasses that soaks up rain water, usually from the roof of a house or other building]
Okay, so I wanted to start out with what is a rain garden – rain garden, because maybe you don’t all know. It really is just a shallow depression in your garden that’s planted with native plants and grasses, generally things that have long roots, that soak up rainwater, and the rainwater is generally funneled from a roof, or a sidewalk, or a driveway, so that the water streams into this – this garden instead of going into the storm sewer system. Okay?
Rain gardens can be large or small. Mine takes up almost half –
[Krista Pfeiffer, on-cam]
– of my front garden, so I’m at about 200 – just over 200 square feet, but I’m probably the exception to the rule. On average what I’ve found is most residential gardens are between 100 and 300 square feet.
Rain gardens, they’re dry except for when it rains. So, if it’s raining tonight, I’ll go home and there may be a little bit of rain standing in my garden, but if you design your rain garden correctly, water doesn’t stand for more than 48 hours. And we had some pretty good rains last fall, and I gotta tell ya, two days, and even if it was full to the brim, by the start of the third day there was no longer rain that was standing. Some people are concerned about rain gardens being, you know, a mosquito breeding ground, and that isn’t the case. It takes mosquitoes two weeks to – they need two weeks of standing water to lay their eggs and have those larvae mature into mosquitoes. Your rain garden should be empty in two days. So, rain gardens are not a mosquito breeding ground.
So, I’m going to tell you about how I got to be a(n) accidental rain gardener here. Last March I had come home from a – a gardening presentation, and I was super excited. I was all ready to get out there, it was spring, it was one of those March days where it was warm, the sky was blue, the sun was shining, the birds were singing, so I had to get out there and prune my Yews. So, I was enjoying spring, and I hear my sump pump behind me kick on, and I’m thinking, “Great! The snow is melting, it really is spring!”, and then I heard the sound of rushing water.
Yeah, that’s not a sign that you wanna hear, and I turned around and there’s a large puddle right at the foundation of my house. So, hmm, had a good idea of what had happened, but we decided to do a little experiment. Rodney came out and he stood as I ran downstairs and filled the couple big five-gallon buckets of water and dumped them in the sump pump, and when it kicked on, I ran back outside to find Rod – Rodney standing, you know, ankle deep in a puddle of water right at the foundation. So, we did a little bit of digging, and we found out that the sump pump line had shattered, not cracked, shattered, right at the foundation of the house.
Not what I was going for on my beautiful spring day. So, we did a little digging, figured out where our line went, creatively rigged the plumbing to get the water away from the house, and I started to explore my options. You know, when life gives you lemons, you make lemonade. When life gives you a broken sump pump line, you make a rain garden.
[laughter]
So, I reached out to – to the Village to see if there were any issues that I needed to be aware of and – or ordinances. So, when you’re doing this, you need to ask the right questions of the right people, or if you have a homeowner’s association, you need to ask them to see if they have any requirements a-around what you can and can’t do. So, I found that the Village of Pleasant Prairie was very cooperative and more than happy to support my rain garden as long as I didn’t have standing water.
So, he said, “As soon as, if your neighbors complain, then you’re filling it in and you’re done. But we have had no complaints, and here’s – heres the thing, if you talk to your neighbors and you get them excited about what you’re doing before you even start, my neighbors were great. They were really supportive. Everybody was really, really interested in why I had a big old trench down the middle, of, you know, the side of my yard. And then, later on, why I had a big old hole in the center of my yard.
[slide titled, Benefits of a Rain Garden – your personal contribution to cleaner water and providing a natural habitat, featuring the following bullet points that rain gardens – increase the amount of water that filters into the ground replenishing local and regional aquifers, reduce storm water runoff protecting streams and lakes from pollutants carried by storm water, enhances the beauty of yards and neighborhoods, and provides a valuable habitat for birds, butterflies, and many beneficial insects]
So, the benefits of a rain garden. You’re gonna find lots of different things. Everybody has something that’s different. These are my, the things that are important to me. I like that I’m not dumping water into the storm sewer system, where the water picks up all the pollutants and herbicides and grass – grass clippings and everything and – and drags it down into the local waterways. That’s important to me. It also replenishes the regional and local aquifers. All that water is filtering down through the plant roots and not going into the storm sewers.
It enhances the beauty, this slide doesn’t have any beauty to show you, but I really, really think that my rain garden is beautiful, and I have lots of insects and butterflies and birds.
[Krista Pfeiffer, on-cam]
There’s always something going on in – in my native garden and in my rain garden, and it provides a valuable habitat for the birds, the butterflies, and – and the beneficial insects that live with us.
So, you – the next slide is about the next step, was choosing the right site. My broken sump pump line kinda helped me choose the site for my rain garden, but you have to – there’s some things to consider.
[slide titled, Choosing the Right Site, featuring following bullet points – you want it at least 10 feet away from your home, check for underground utilities before you dig, full to partial sun works best, and not directly over a septic system. The slide also features a photo of a persons backyard with the area for the rain garden marked in green and noting to make sure that downspout and sump pump hose extensions are buried but not more than a few inches underground and when the rain garden is excavated 6 or 7 inches deep it must be leveled in all four directions which is one of the most important factors for a well-functioning rain garden]
You want it at least 10 feet away from the foundation of your house. So, you have to come out far enough so that, if there’s standing water, that you’re not compromising your house structure. You need to know where your underground utilities are, because you’re gonna be digging four to eight inches down, depending on how big your rain garden is and how much water that it’s holding.
Partial to full sun works best. The sun helps with the evaporation of the water when there’s a big – a big rainfall. And, this is – I don’t have this issue because I’m in the Village, but for those of you who are in the County, if you have a septic system, you don’t want –
[Krista Pfeiffer, on-cam]
– your rain garden over your septic system as well. So, those are kind of things to think about when you’re choosing your site for your rain garden. Contact your local municipalities to make sure there aren’t any local ordinances that you need to know about or permits that you have to pull.
Check with your real homeowner’s group if you’re in a subdivision and talk to people. Let them know what you’re doing. Get them excited about your project.
For choosing the site – the right site of your rain garden, generally rain gardens –
[slide titled, Choosing the Right Size for Your Rain Garden, with the following questions and their answers – How deep will the garden be? – generally 4-8 inches deep with the slope of the yard determining the depth of the rain garden, What type of soil will be garden planted in? – sandy soils drain the quickest and clay soils drain the slowest, How much roof, driveway and/or lawn will drain into the garden? – the larger the drainage area directed to your garden, the larger your garden will be. Also noted is that most rain gardens are between 100 to 300 square feet]
– are four to eight inches deep, and you have to take into account lots of things. Remember when I told you I wasn’t an engineer? This really isn’t my favorite part. You – you take into consideration the slope of your yard, as well as how much square footage is going to be draining into it. You have to look at your soil type and say, you know, “Do I have sand or clay?” It’s gonna depend on how quickly your rain garden processes the water through it. I have clay in Pleasant – Pleasant Prairie, and if you’ve ever dealt with clay, it is very slow to drain. Someone with sandy soil would have that water going through much quicker than what I have.
And then, like I said, how much square footage of your roof, or your driveway, your sidewalk, whatever is feeding the water into your rain garden, the – the more square-footage that’s draining –
[Krista Pfeiffer, on-cam]
– into your rain garden, the bigger your rain garden has to be. Ill show ya – I – I have some copies for you in the back.
[slide featuring the cover of a Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources how-to pamphlet on creating a rain garden and the website – dnr.wi.gov/topic/shorelandzoning/documents/rgmanual.pdf]
This is – was my go-to manual. Everything is in here. This walked you right through how to do it and the calculations. I wasn’t overly confident in my calculations for my square footage on my rain garden, so I also brought in Root – The Root Pike Watershed Initiative Network. I consulted with them –
[Krista Pfeiffer, on-cam]
– to make sure that I was doing it right and that my calculations were correct, and we were within, Allison’s calculations, she was about five feet smaller in the rain garden, and – and an inch shallower. So, my calculations, I would have been fine. I just lacked the confidence. This one will walk you through, right, how to plan and do the calculations, for those of you who aren’t engineers like I am.
My rain garden supports the rainwater off of 506 square feet of roof. I have a downspout that comes from the central part of my roof, a downspout from the overhang over my porch, and then that pesky sump pump. That is kind of an extra, so I went a little bigger and a little deeper, ’cause I didn’t know how often my sump pump was going to be running. Normally, with normal rains, it doesn’t kick in much at all, but I needed to be prepared, and I went a little bigger. Okay?
Talk to people who have rain gardens. I haven’t met a gardener yet that didn’t like to talk about their gardens. And the ones that I’ve spoken with, and you guys are a perfect example of this, I mean, we’re more than happy to share information about what works and what doesn’t work. So, talk to people about their – about their gardens and I’ll share with you a little bit things I would do differently as we go on.
Now we go to what’s fun, at least to me, plant selection and design.
[slide titled, Plant Selection and Design, featuring a photo of four different varieties of plants in plant holders in a garage and these three points – Plant selection depends on your sun and soil conditions. Picking the right plants determines the success of your garden. And many landscape nurseries can provide ideas, designs, and suggested plants]
So, you have to do just like any garden, your homework. Your gonna – your plant selection is going to depend on your sun conditions, how much you have each day, what your soil conditions are, again, is it clay, is it – is it sand, and spend the time researching what plants work well in your area. Like I said, I’m a big proponent of native plants, part of that is because they’re designed to be here. They don’t require a lot of maintenance. They – they support the insects and the butterflies and the birds. They have so many benefits that that’s my preference for a rain garden. And they have these really deep roots that help to soak up the water as it’s sitting there.
One of the resources that I liked for selecting plants –
[Krista Pfeiffer, on-cam]
– was the Missouri Botanic Garden website. They have a section there where you can, it’s called Plant Finder, and you can put in the common name or the bot – the scientific name, and it will bring you up a picture of what the plant looks like, and a really good description of how it likes to grow, what it needs to thrive and survive.
Get involved in local organizations, like Master Gardeners, or talk to Master Gardeners. Talk to people who have rain gardens, people who have natives. There are a few people here in the room that are part of the Wild Ones organization, and we’re more than happy to tell you all about the benefits of using native plants in your landscape. If your – I’m gonna do a shameless plug. So, if you’re looking for these native plants and you’re not sure where to find them, the Wild Ones chapter has a(n) annual native plant sale. Kris will send something out in an email to you, but it’s the first Saturday in June, and we’re here in Kenosha, but we’re at the Gateway Technical College in Kenosha on 30th Avenue. So, if you’re looking for native plants, we’ve got ’em for ya. Okay?
I’ll tell you what I have growing in mine. This is my design –
[slide titled, Whats growing in my Rain Garden – 204 native plants and sedges, featuring an illustrated map of Kristas rain garden on the left with all the different plants represented by multiple shapes, sizes and colors – one plant per square foot; on the right-hand side is the key to her plant map indicating what plants the different shapes, sizes and colors represent]
– and I – I have to confess a little bit. This is the only garden of mine that I’ve actually done design work for. Normally I’m kind of a picker and sticker, but this is what’s growing. On the next slide I have pictures –
[new slide titled, What do these native plants look like, featuring twelve photos of the twelve native plants that are in Kristas rain garden]
– so that you can see how pretty native plants are. Half of my garden is Fox Sedge, so it’s like a grass-looking plant, and the other half are the native forbs like this. And I have False Indigo, and Black-eyed Susan, there’s Milkweed and Coneflower, there’s Asters, there’s something that blooms pretty much all of the time. Right now, we’re still a little – everything’s kind of little, but I have things that bloom right into – right into the fall.
Plants were the biggest expense in my rain garden.
[Krista Pfeiffer, on-cam]
I planted one native plant for every square foot. So, there’s 204 native plants in my rain garden. At a cost of $700, just over $770, okay? Smaller means – smaller garden means smaller expenses.
I’m gonna put in a plug again for native plants and why I like to use them. The native plants are designed here, and the birds and insects have learned to rely on these plants for their food sources and for their nesting. And if you are working with cultivars or with ornamentals, they look beautiful. I – I – there’s lots of them that look very similar to the natives, but they don’t necessarily give the insects and the birds the things, those slight variations that they have in nectar, in bloom, in when things bloom, the thorns, the leaves, all of those things can play havoc on the natural ecosystem. So, again, just when youre – if you’re looking to plant native plants, look closely at the scientific name and avoid the plants who have the third word in quotes. That’s usually an indication that you aren’t planting something that’s native. You’re planting something that’s a variation or a cultivar.
So, digging. Okay, I told you that I have clay, like really bad clay. We started digging our rain garden by hand.
[slide titled, Lets Start Digging – Building Your Rain Garden, featuring a photo of Kristas rain garden in early stages and the following steps as bullet points – mark out the perimeter of your garden, start digging, heap the soil around the edge to create a wall, when the whole area has been dug out to the right depth – level the garden floor, fill in the low places and dig out the high places, and once your rain garden is level (or as close to level as its going to get) rake the soil smooth]
After six hours of digging in Pleasant Prairie’s lovely clay soil, we had blisters, we had sore backs, and we had a really small area dug out of our garden. So, we decided if we were going to keep doing this by hand, it was gonna take us all the way to Labor Day before we could actually plant anything in the garden.
[Krista Pfeiffer, on-cam]
We cheated, took the easy road, and we rented a Bobcat, and had the rest of the digging down to about an – an hour, and Rodney had a great time playing with the Bobcat in the front lawn. So, if you’re gonna go with renting equipment, that is also gonna increase the cost of your – of your rain garden. You can, you know, do it by hand if you have the time and the energy, or you can take a shorter cut and use equipment to help you get there faster. It’s just a personal preference.
[return to the Lets Start Digging slide]
Okay. Planting your rain garden. Oops. Alright, lets –
[new slide titled, Planting Your Rain Garden, featuring a photo of Kristas newly planted rain garden and listing the following steps as bullet points – lay out plants as planned on foot apart, dig each hole twice as big as the plant plug and deep enough to keep the crown of the plant level, fill the hole and firmly tap around the roots to avoid air pockets, apply approximately two inches of mulch, water immediately after planting and as needed afterwards, and as a generic rule plants need one inch of water per week]
Mark off the perimeter of your rain garden and know that you’re going to plant your – your plants. Again, follow the planting instructions, depending on what you buy, it’s general rule for natives, is one per square foot. You guys know all this as Master Gardeners already. Dig your plants a little bit – your holes bigger and just deep enough so that the crown of the plant is at the surface. Okay?
Fill it in, tap things down to get out any air that might be trapped. Water your plants in. Okay. Apply mulch, mulch is another one of those things that it’s worth the time and the investment up front. The recommendations that I saw were to go about two inches of mulch, helps with water preservation in keeping your plants moist that first year and future years, and it keeps the weeds down. I – I’m one of those kind of weird people –
[Krista Pfeiffer, on-cam]
– that I don’t find weeding to be tedious. I can go out there and lose track of time and just pick. With the mulch, I – I didn’t really have anything. That year, a few straggling seeds that came in, but not a lot of weeding that was necessary.
If Mother Nature doesn’t provide the rain, then you get to do it. About an inch of water per week for your plants. Okay.
My plants arrived Memorial Day. I took my entire Memorial Day weekend last year to plant 204 plants –
[slide titled, Maintaining Your Rain Garden, featuring a photo of Kristas rain garden covered in snow and the following bullet points – Minimal watering – the first year of your rain garden, youll need to water if Nature doesnt provide, but once your plants are established you shouldnt need to water, Minimal weeding – really only needed the first couple of years to make sure the weeds dont overtake your new native plants, Minimal Up Keep – leave the stems and seedheads for winter interest, wildlife cover and bird food and in spring cut back and compost the tattered remains of last years growth]
– but it was definitely worth it in what we – what we have growing today.
Maintaining your rain garden. My – my – gard – garden is just barely a year old. It’ll be a year-old Memorial Day weekend. So, I’ve had the – the thrill of watching things grow in spring and in summer last year. I had – had the fall. I left everything stand in my garden. Again, for – I like the winter interest, the birds. There were parties in my front yard all winter long of different birds coming through and picking through the seed heads. It was so much fun to – to watch who was in the garden, even in the winter.
[Krista Pfeiffer, on-cam]
And so, and – and I’ve had spring now, so I just in the last two weeks have kind of gone through and seen what came back and what didn’t. I’ve done some deadheading. I’ve given all my Fox Sedge a haircut ’cause they were kind of brown and shaggy. Again, it’s personal preference whether how much maintenance you do in the fall or during the spring.
Minimal watering. The first year Mother Nature provided really well for me. I only had to water my plants probably two times over the whole summer. I hand-watered, I have a rain barrel. So, I hand-watered all 204 of my plants. I was very glad to have Mother Nature providing the rain. The mulch kept the weeds down. Most of my gardens with natives, once they fill in, they really – they kind of keep the – the weeds down themselves. And so, thats – thats – very – it’s been very little maintenance, and hopefully Margiell tell you the same thing when she talks about – about your rain garden.
I have some resources on the – on the screen for you –
[slide titled, Resources, and the following list, Rain Gardens – a how-to manual for homeowners (previously referred to D.N.R. pamphlet), Wild Ones (wildones.org), Root Pike Watershed Initiative Network (rootpikewin.org), Missouri Botanical Garden Plant Finder (missouribotanicalgarden.org/PlantFinder), and Prairie Nursery Inc. (prairienursery.com)]
– and I think we have a handout in the back, so you don’t have to write these all down, but these were the resources that I used for my rain garden. Like I said, this one here is from the U.W.-Extension –
[Krista Pfeiffer, on-cam, holding D.N.R. pamphlet]
– and this was my Bible. So, I would recommend this one if you’re interested in doing a rain garden, and there’s copies here in the back for you. You can also download them online if you prefer an electronic format. Wild Ones has information about rain gardens. They have some printed literature.
[return to the Resources slide]
The national website has information about rain gardens. When you go to different conferences, you’ll see that all different landscapers have information about rain gardens.
There’s a resource there for the botanic gardens that I used – the plant finder that I like, and my plants are from – from Prairie Nursery. I’ve found that they have a really nice website –
[Krista Pfeiffer, on-cam]
– and selection. And if you don’t wanna do your plant selection, Prairie Nursery, as well as other nurseries, have those pre-planned gardens where they – they do all the work for you and you just plant along with their diagrams. So, they do have different rain garden designs that are there for different types of soils and different types of sun conditions.
So, I hope my experience has been helpful to you. I – I have thoroughly enjoyed my rain garden and I’m gonna let Margie share her experience.
What did you do?
[Margie Hannes, Master Gardener, Racine/Kenosha Master Gardener Association]
I, in 2008, went to training at the – for Rain Gardens with the W.I.N., Root-Pike Watershed Initiative Network, and they were doing grants, so I had to go to three sessions. And the reason I went to the training is because when it rained at my house my neighbor on the east, the water would swill into my property, and over to the neighbor in the west, and his property was flooding really bad. So, we didn’t want to change, we can’t change the natural swell of it, so we figured out if we put a rain garden in, that would help stop some of it.
Plus, this area that you see here –
[slide titled, Full to Partial Sun Rain Garden, featuring a photo of Margies rain garden and the following stats about it – size – 75 square feet, number of plants – 75, 5 bags of mulch, total cost – $75]
– it was so wet that we couldn’t mow it. So, we were out there with the weed whacker constantly cutting it down. My rain garden is full to partial sun.
And this is – this is the design that the W.I.N. came up with for my yard. They figured 75 feet. I didn’t want it any larger. So, you can have a small rain garden. I have – they gave me 75 plants, 5 bags of mulch, which I wound up having to buy more because as Kris just said you have to have at least two inches. I like a little bit more ’cause I don’t wanna be out there doing anything. And plus, I had to build a berm –
[Margie Hannes, on-cam]
– around it, and it cost me $75. So, I don’t know if they’re still doing that program. Oh, they’re shaking their head, no, but it was very nice.
Okay, this is the design.
[slide titled, Design Based on one plant per square foot, featuring a new photo of Margies rain garden and a list of all the plants that were planted in her rain garden]
It’s, as Krista said, one plant per square foot. I do like a little bit closer, and they gave me a lot of plants for that area, so I put mine a little closer.
Those are the plants that are in mine, the New England Aster, Wild Blue Flag Iris, the Torrey Rush, Marsh Blazingstar, Great Blue Lobelia, Winged Loosestrife – strife, and Prairie Cordgrass, Ohio Spiderwort, and Golden Alexander.
[Margie Hannes, on-cam]
And this picture is probably – little bit after probably the following year. It’s a little bit hard to see, but you can see –
[return to the Design Based on one plant per square foot slide]
– on each side, those are where I put the Irises, and they’re Wisconsin native Irises, and they get tall. The blades alone will come up to my waist, and they’re a very nice purple color.
[new slide featuring a photo of Margies rain garden taken in spring]
This slide shows the garden and what plants are coming up in June, and the Irises are usually one of the first things that are up.
[new slide featuring a photo of Margies rain garden taken from a different angle]
You can see the prairie grass and how it takes over the garden. I probably would next time try to, if I was doing this again, not put that in because it just, it choked out a lot of the plants that I received when I started.
[Margie Hannes, on-cam]
So, this year I – I’m not going to be able to do anything with the tall that’s already there because the roots are probably 20 feet long, but I try to stay on top of what’s coming up.
[slide featuring a photo of a side view of Margies rain garden]
This is a side view just to kind of show you how tall those Irises get. And my garden, it says 75 feet – square feet, but I went out there today and I was measuring it and every year when you start to redo your berm because I have, it slants, and the back part where the rain is, that berm will come down a little. When the rain falls, the berm will come down a little bit. So, every year it gets about two inches bigger. So right now, it’s 84 square feet.
[laughter]
[Margie Hannes, on-cam]
And I – I’ll have to put some more plants in, but I have enough now that I can separate them and move them around.
[slide with a close-up photo of a New England Aster in Margies rain garden]
This is a New England Aster, and you can see where the prairie grass has taken over and it’s choking it out. So, you have to be careful with what, or you have to really know what you’re putting in there.
[new slide titled, Rain Garden Fall Maintenance, featuring a photo of Margies rain garden in the fall and the point that you need to decide whether to leave it or cut it down]
Rain garden fall maintenance, leave it or cut it down. If there aren’t any seed heads on any of my plants, I get the hedge clipper out there and I do cut mine down. In back of my rain garden –
[Margie Hannes, on-cam]
– I have tall evergreens, and we have coyotes running through my yard, and I want to be able to see when I let my dog out there. Plus, it’s easier for me to take care of because not always is my husband around to help me. So, if I’m doing it, the hedge clipper comes out.
Just to let you know, we have all our downspouts diverted into the rain garden by drain tiles –
[return to the Rain Garden Fall Maintenance slide]
– and we need to keep the debris out of the back of the – the back channel because of the – the downspouts running in, and I – so I’m constantly back there cleaning that out so the leaves don’t clog it up.
[new slide titled, 2010 Winter, featuring a photo of Margies rain garden covered in snow]
When it fills up with too much water in the spring, we sometimes have to release the berm and – and break it apart so that some of that water can come out.
[Margie Hannes, on-cam]
This is the winter. I left the seed heads on that year.
[return to the 2010 Winter slide]
I figured the birds would like them. Plus, I kind of get scolded from some people to, you know, leave some of that up. [laughs]
[new slide featuring a photo of Margies rain garden in late winter]
This is this March, and you probably can’t see too well, but at the back the water was filling up. And so, I needed to release that.
[new slide featuring a wider shot of Margies rain garden after a rain with standing water next to it]
So, we released the berm, and this is on a rainy day, and the garden can’t take any more rain, so it’s floating around in the back there to the back of my evergreens. But before that rain garden was there, all that rain would come around from the east neighbor to my backyard and it would flood in the back there where that man has his truck parts and machinery.
[Margie Hannes, on-cam]
So, it really helped us. So, what I want to show you here is –
[slide titled, Somers Town Hall Rain Garden, featuring a photo of a three year old rain garden with master gardener volunteers planting new plants in it]
– a Master Gardener project. This is this Somer’s Town Hall rain garden. We did not put it in, but we are helping to maintain it. It was put in in 2012, and it’s 654 square feet.
[new slide featuring a photo of the Somer Town Hall rain garden in full bloom in front of the town hall]
The Somer’s rain garden captures discharge from two downspouts from the new Town Hall, and the total infiltration is 26,180 gallons. So, that give you some idea that it benefits that all –
[Margie Hannes, on-cam]
– that water is not going down, you know, in the drain. It’s being captured right there.
So, I like to give little tips. When I was looking for my plant tags, they were all dirty, so I went, this is my rain garden, so if you come to visit my rain garden, which you’re welcome to do, these will be hanging in the garage on a little zip tie, and it’s easy for me then to find them, so I can let you see all my plants. So, I hope you enjoyed this.
[applause]
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