Posted: May 30, 2011 by: laura

I recently learned about this inspiring program from David Hymel of Stewardship Partners in Washington. Their raingarden program helps homeowners install raingardens in neighborhood clusters.

They have a great map with images and diagrams of the raingardens (view map here), tons of raingarden resources, and a program to install 12,000 raingardens by 2016. The text below is from their website: 12,000 Raingardens in Pudget Sound

The majority of our region's Puget Sound pollution is caused by rainwater runoff from our streets, driveways, lawns and rooftops! In fact, 14 million pounds of toxins enter Puget Sound each year. Having clean air and water and beautiful natural areas is a major part of what makes Washington a great place to live. Waterways like Puget Sound, Commencement Bay and the Skagit River give us places to enjoy nature, fish and hike. Our waterways are central to our food source, and our local economies. But toxic runoff, the number one source of pollution to Puget Sound, is threatening the health of our water. Every time it rains, millions of gallons of toxic runoff wash into Puget Sound and our lakes and rivers, spreading poisons that threaten our health, environment and economy.

The Puget Sound Partnership has stated that inaction will "ultimately place a much higher burden on all of us – both economically, in health costs from exposure to toxic substances, and environmentally, in the loss of the stunning and vibrant life of Puget Sound, the economic engine for our state. Declines of fisheries, both commercial and recreational, have impacted all of Puget Sound. The alternative to the decentralized approaches of pollution and flood control like rain gardens and low...

Posted: Sep 20, 2010 by: laura

Laney Green Jobs StudentsLaney Green Jobs StudentsThis year Greywater Action has been providing hands-on training for students of Laney College's Green Jobs Training Program. So far we've completed five hands-on installations, building greywater systems from washing machines to irrigate the landscape. Now dozens of fruit trees, shade trees, and shrubs are irrigated by greywater, saving tens of thousands of gallons of clean drinking water each year.

Its been an enormous pleasure to work with the students in this program. Not only has each workshop has left a well-functioning greywater system, but also a happy home owner! Here are thoughts from one after the workshop:
Dear Laney Students
Thank you all for a fabulous job! We are so thrilled! and the plants even more I am sure.
I am really impressed by the end product but equally so by the craftsmanship, the seamless teamwork, and the great care and consideration given to this mature and not always easy to maneuver garden!
I feel very fortunate to have been able to accomplish this so easily and promptly.
Thank you for making our world greener, one garden at a time! I will certainly do my best to pass on the good news to clients and gardeners. Get those green jobs going!
 
Katrine
(local landscape designer)...
Posted: Aug 13, 2010 by: Christopher Reamer

by Chris Reamer     

 Some come for the ferris wheel, the funnel cakes, and the farm animals. But this year 250,000 people also got the Sonoma County Fairs' first ever greywater irrigation demonstration garden.  The simple display shows how to properly set up a 3-way valve to divert the greywater from your laundry machine, and construct outlets in mulch shields and mulch basins around edible plants to safely and effectively reuse greywater for irrigation.
     “What about the soap?”, “You mean this is LEGAL!??”, “What is...”grey” water?” After fielding thousands of questions over the 15 days of the fair, and watching fliers literally “fly” off the table, I walk away with a great feeling of optimism for the future of greywater reuse in our community, as well as a profound respect for how much work still needs to be done to get the word out there. Fortunately, obvious logic pretty much sells itself. There is something rather poetic in that moment of simple realization when a person sees that they themselves “could grow an entire orchard- with what goes “down the drain”.
      The demonstration garden was created for Sustainable Sonoma by Organic Landscapes inc., in cooperation with the Water Conservation Department of the City of Santa Rosa. Techniques for Rainwater catchment, sheet mulching, low water/edible/useful/native planting, and permaculture were also demonstrated.  Special thanks to Greywater Action for the fliers and for teaching us how to do this stuff!

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