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The Backyard Bog
Not quite two months ago, my wife and I became home owners. We love it. But in additional to the pride of ownership, there are also the worries: Can we really afford this house? Should we get earthquake insurance? Why does a small lake appear in the backyard when it rains?
That last one has been on our minds a lot lately. After 26 consecutive days of rain (and counting) here in Seattle, there's a frighteningly large pool of water that has swamped the roses and turned the lawn into something resembling the Everglades. My dad jokingly suggested that we stock it with trout. But I have a better idea: I'm going to landscape my way out of the problem.
There's a growing movement in sustainable landscaping that emphasizes not only native plants and summer drought tolerance, but also managing water runoff during our many wet months. Lisa Stiffler over at Dateline Earth (the Seattle Post-Intelligencer's environmental blog) puts it thus:
The gist of it is this: By creating some very shallow depressions in your landscaping and planting them with hardy grasses, shrubs and trees in well-draining soil and covering the ground with a thin layer of mulch, you can catch and slow the flow of rainwater. This "rain garden" gives the stormwater a chance to soak into the dirt, helping trap pollutants and preventing the water from harming streams where salmon and other cool creatures chill out.
Lisa also includes a bevy of links to handy resources. Check them out.
In particular, I'm fascinated by some advice from the Puget Sound Action Team. They describe how one home owner in Shoreline, Washington--who was similarly cursed with saturated soils--created a bog garden. He built a retention pond and used a variety of plants to create a yard that can process an estimated 10,800 gallons of water a year on his quarter-acre lot. Total cost? Just $600.
Landscaping for water management helps ameliorate some of the environmental effects of impervious surfaces: less pollution runs off roofs and city streets. And during storms, less water deluges the city drain system that discharges untreated sewage into the Sound when it gets overloaded. Plus, there's another benefit: I won't be freaked out about my basement flooding.
Sounds like a no-brainer to me. I'm going to start digging just as soon as this rain stops.
Prince(ss) of Tides
Since last Friday, I'm proud to announce, the venerable Cascadian news website Tidepool has been a project of Sightline. Yep, we've completed a friendly takeover!
Since 1997, Tidepool has been highlighting the most significant news that's shaping Cascadia. Every morning, Tidepool's editors scan dozens of news sites and assemble the stories that will actually matter in Cascadia a few years hence--the slow news (pdf). It's an essential service, and it's one that thousands of Cascadians use every day.
Tidepool was seeking a new home, and its service is a natural complement for this blog and Sightline's other analyses of key trends in Cascadia. So both organizations are excited about the transfer. We think it'll lead to big improvements all the way around--in the news digest, in the blog, and in our website.
Tidepool has long been a community asset--something kept healthy through the active support of its thousands of readers. This new phase in Tidepool's development won't change that fact; to the contrary, Sightline will soon introduce more ways to participate in Tidepool's evolution. If you're not already a member of that community, please join by signing up for a free subscription.
For more information on Sightline's ownership--really, stewardship--of Tidepool, read this letter to its subscribers.
And meet the new Sightline editor of Tidepool: Princess of Tides Kristin Kolb-Angelbeck.