Get out of the
drain age, into the retain age
Deborah K.
Rich
Saturday, December
6, 2008
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/12/06/HOTB1496GP.DTL&type=homeandgarden
Embedded in both
urban and suburban lot design is the "pave and pipe paradigm,"
according to Brock Dolman, director of the Occidental Arts &
Ecology Center's Water Institute. It favors grading, piping and paving
properties to drain away rainwater as quickly as
possible.
\
But rapidly
draining water off landscapes rather than allowing it the time and
space to soak in causes a host of problems downstream and in the
pipes.
Culverts pour
water into gullies and seasonal creeks, overloading and eroding the
natural drainage area and rushing sediment into rivers, streams and
estuaries, where it imperils fish.
Downspouts,
gutters and sloping driveways conduct water into the storm water and
sewer systems, which can dump raw sewage when overloaded. After we're
finished draining our properties, we pay, increasingly dearly, to pipe
water back into our homes and landscapes.
Dolman advocates
replacing the "drain age" with a new "retain age,"
wherein we capture and store storm water for future use and resculpt
yards and gardens to allow water to percolate into the ground.
To take a step into the retain age, consider harvesting rainwater from
your roof and banking more water in your soil.
Harvesting
roof water
Every inch of
rainfall on 100 square feet of roof surface yields 55 to 60 gallons of
water. For a 2,500-square-foot home, that translates to 1,375 to 1,500
gallons of water per inch of rain. This water can be caught and stored
in above- or belowground cisterns and used for drinking, in-house
nonpotable uses or irrigation, depending upon what filtration systems
are installed and upon local regulations.
For information on
roof water harvesting systems, go to:
--
www.arcsa.org: The American Rainwater Catchment Systems Association
Web site features links to a wide range of rainwater harvesting
resources. Click on Resources to see the list.
--
links.sfgate.com/ZFOA: This page links you directly to the ecology center's
list of articles and books on the subject (scroll to the bottom of the
page).
--
links.sfgate.com/ZFOB: A "Renewable Energy Site for Do-It-Yourselfers"
with links to information on roof water harvesting systems.
If installing a
roof water cistern seems too daunting, consider cutting off the bottom
of a downspout and sliding a rain barrel under it to catch a portion
of the water falling on your roof. Use the water to irrigate your
garden during dry periods between storms.
Several sites
provide information on rain barrels:
--
links.sfgate.com/ZFOC: The San Francisco Public Utilities Commission's Web
site has information on the commission's recently launched program to
help San Francisco residents purchase rain barrels at a discounted
price.
--
links.sfgate.com/ZFOD: A good description of how to build a rain barrel from
the Maryland Department of Natural Resources.
--
links.sfgate.com/ZFOE: Find rain barrel as well as roof water harvesting
information on this "Renewable Energy Site for
Do-It-Yourselfers."
Harvesting
water in the soil
Creating rain
gardens, berm and swale configurations, and other landscape features
that allow draining rainwater to safely infiltrate the soil can
increase the beauty and productivity of yards, gardens and extended
acreage while reducing the impact of downstream and gutter storm water
flow.
Erik Ohlsen, owner of Permaculture Artisans in Sebastopol, offered
these ideas:
-- First, go
outside when it is raining and see where the water is flowing on your
property. "Pay special attention to the downspouts on your
structures and remember that the water in the downspouts is a
resource. Is it just draining away into a pipe? Find out where it's
going."
-- Then imagine
the draining water being put to use. "Look around your property
and think what it might look like if that water was entering the
landscape."
-- Track the money
and time you spend on your irrigation system, and look at your
drought-stressed plants. "As you bring storm water into your
landscape, those issues will start to go away."
-- Finally,
remember that we're all in this together. "Think of your
responsibility to do what you can on your property to reduce the
amount of water that flows into storm drains."
Some practical advice:
-- Start with a
shovel rather than a backhoe. Get a feel for your soil and water
interactions before taking on a large project. Or pay for advice from
someone who has worked with the soils, slopes and climate in your
area.
-- The steeper the slope, the more strategic you'll have to be about
what techniques you apply to slow water drainage. "It's not
always appropriate to infiltrate thousands or hundreds of thousands of
gallons of water on a particular site."
-- Geological surveys will help you understand how water moves through
a property. On slopes where you have shallow soil resting on bedrock,
you must be careful about harvesting too much water. If the soil
becomes saturated and the water starts to sheet and flow on top of the
bedrock, the soil can slump off and trigger severe erosion.
-- Spillways and diversion drains that conduct water to a rain garden
or lower swale should be lined with rock to prevent erosion.
-- Design your project to handle the amount of water entering the
landscape during the heaviest rain. "You design for catastrophe,"
said Ohlsen. "And then you go just a little bit more."
This
article appeared on page F - 6 of the
San Francisco Chronicle