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Residential Rain Gardens
Rick Durham
Consumer Horticulture Extension SpecialistUniversity of Kentucky
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Rain garden strategically located low areaplanted with native vegetation that interceptsrunoff and allows it to infiltrate the soil.
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Photo Copyright 1999, Center for Watershed Protection
Why Should We Consider Rain Gardens?
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Run Off
Typical run off from a city block is 9Xgreater than a wooded area of similar
size due to pavement -substantially, but not completely
Rain gardens promote 30% moreinfiltration than lawns
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Flooding from 3 Rainfall
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Rain Garden?No! Erosion and nutrient run off upstream results insiltation downstream.
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Rain Gardens
Increase the amount of water thatinfiltrates the soil to recharges aquifers
Help protect community from flooding
Help protect streams and lakes frompollutants carried in run off
Enhance neighborhood beauty Provide wildlife habitat
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Rain Gardens Can Be Beautiful
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Excavation of an infiltration trench
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Completed Infiltration Trench
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Overflow to Storm Drain
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Stormwater Runoff Solutions begin byreducing the amount of impermeable
surfaces.
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Grass Pave
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Single FamilyResidence or Commercial Property
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Ok, Lets Now Take a Lookat Rain Gardens
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Getting Started
How Big does it need to be? Where do I need to locate it?
Soil Considerations? What Plants should we use?
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How big do I make my raingarden ?
Design it to handle a 1.25 inch rain event
(this captures 80% of rainfall events) Square footage x 1.25 in. (or .104 ft) = X cu ft of water
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60 feet30feet
60 x 30 = 1800 sq. ft.
1800 sq. ft. x .104 ft. of rain (1.25 in rain)=
187 cu. Ft. of water
Just for Fun
187 cu. ft. of water x 7.48 = 1398 gallons
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187 cu. Ft. of water
10 x 12 x 1.5 feet deep = 180 cu. Ft.
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Size of Rain Garden
Rain Gardens can be of any size or shape
Sandy soil, garden should be 20-30% of
Heavy clay soils, garden should be 50-60% the size of the drain area
Most residential rain gardens will be100-300 sq. ft.
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Where does it need to be?
Locate the rain garden down slope from anybuildings
Away from large trees (easier digging) In areas that take advanta e of natural slo e. Consider the size and placement in the
landscape design. It may be easier to createtwo separate rain gardens.
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Excavating
For large projects it may be easier to hire alandscaper.
For smaller projects use the excavated soil
to build a berm on the downhill side of the. Use a rope or water hose to layout the edge
of the garden, use stakes and string to level.
For deep gardens set aside the top 4-6inches of soil (topsoil), excavate the holethen use the top soil to backfill the plantingarea.
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Soil Considerations
Do a perk test. Dig a hole 8 inches deep and fill withwater. If it takes more than 24 hours to drain thenthe soil needs to be amended.
On poorly drained soil excavate 10-12 inches of soil
from hole, mix 3-6 inches of coarse sand or smallravel with excavated soil and re lace into raingarden.
Bring 2 cups of soil to Extension Office for soil testAdd lime and fertilizer according to soil test results,3-6 inches of organic matter then till to a depth of 6
inches. Rain garden soil mix = 50-60% sand, 20-30% top soil,20-30% compost (Rain Gardens of WesternMichigan)
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What about mosquitoes?
Life cycle requires 7-14 days from eggto adult
Require standing water during juvenile
Most rain gardens will drain within 3-4days, usually sooner
A properly designed rain garden will notbreed mosquitoes!
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Now the fun part Picking the
plants Determine sun exposure
Full sun = 6 or more hours of direct sun Part Sun to Part Shade=
less than 6 hours of direct sun Shade = virtually no direct sun - problems
Dont forget specific site problems Plants will need to be watered until established Weed management strategy needed for first year
or so Choose native were possible. Drought tolerant,
deep rooted, deer resistant?
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Trees
Deciduous / Evergreen
Plant as Specimens or in Groups Consider Bark / Shape / Flowering Provide Habitats for Birds
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Trees for Rain Gardens
Sweetbay Magnolia Winter King
Hawthorn Hackberr
Red Maple River Birch Black Gum
Fringetree Ginko
Willow Oak Sycamore
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River Birch
Distinguished bybark
50' X 50' mature size Drou ht tolerance Multi-stemmed
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Baldcypress Drought
Tolerance Deciduous 60' x 25' Plant as
Specimen or inGroups
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Red Maple
40'-60' x 40'-60'
Droughto erance Excellent Fall
Color
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Ginkgo
25'-50' X 20'-40'
Pest Free / Resistanceo amage Tolerates Most Soil
Conditions
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Ginkgo - Fruit / Leaf
Fan Shaped
Leaf Undesirable
Fruit
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Black Gum
Nyssa sylvatica 60-80 feet Deciduous
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Willow Oak
Quercus phellos 40-60 ft. Hightower
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Sweetbay Magnolia
Magnolia virginiana 20-30 ft. Evergreen
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Winter King Hawthorn
Crategus virdis'Winter King
Slow growth 15-20 ft. Deciduous Fall/winter berries
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Hackberry
Celtis occidentalis 80 ft. Deciduous
.
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Fringetree
Chionanthusvirginicus
Small understoryree
deciduous
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Shrubs for Rain Gardens
Arrowwood Buttonbush Summersweet
Clethra
AmericanBeautyberry
BottlebrushBuckeye
Wax Myrtle Inkberry Oakleaf Hydrangea
Sweetspire
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Inkberry
DroughtTolerance
Withstands Heavy
Pruning Adapted to
Various SoilTypes
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Arrow wood
Viburnumdentatum
8 ft tall x 6 ft. Fruit eaten by
birds Fall color red to
reddish purple
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Bottlebrush Buckeye
Aesculus parviflora 8-15 ft. Deciduous
stalk in June
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Oakleaf Hydrangea
Hydrangeaquercifolia
6 feet Deciduous Great fall color
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Sweetspire
Itea 4-5 feet tall and wide Great burgundy fall
color May-June white
fragrant flowersresembling fluffycaterpillars
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Buttonbush
Cephalanthusoccidentalis
18 ft. Bees and
butterflies Fragrant
Dried flowersoften remainthrough winter
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Sweet Pepperbush
(Summer Sweet Clethra) Clethra alnifolia Blooms June-
Jul Drought Tolerant Yellow Fall Color
ExcellentFragrance 10 ft.
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American Beautyberry
6' x 6' Drought
Tolerance Cut Back Each
Year Berries for
Wildlife
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Herbaceous Plants for Rain
Gardens Swamp Milkweed Cinnamon Fern Canna Lilies
Asters Blackeyed Susan Lobelia
Rushes Liriope/Mondograss
Ironweed Joe Pye Weed St. Johns Wort
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Asters
Aster novae-angliaeNew England Aster
Color:purple
Late summer/fallflowering
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Blackeyed Susan
Rudbeckia 'Indian Summer Goldstrum
flowering
Foliage 8-12 inches
Flowers up to 2 feet
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Lobelia cardinalis Cardinal Flower
Red flowers in later summer and fall
Cardinal Flower
2-4 feet tall Few pests
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Goldenrod
SolidagoGoldenrod
Height: cultivar dependent, 3-6 feet
Late summer/fallflowering
Not considered acontributor to hayfever
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St. Johns Wort
Hypericum spp. 200 species
Ground cover tomedium shrub
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Swamp Milkweed
Asclepias incarnata Summer flowers Butterflies
aphids
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Ironweed
Vernonianoveboracensis
Flowers mid to late
summer Height to 6 feet Butterflies
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Liriope
Great Border Ground Cover
Grows in Moistreas Easy to Grow Increase by
Division
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Cinnamon Fern
Osmundacinnamomea
Deciduous
2-5 feet ht.
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Joe Pye Weed
Eupatorium Late Summer
Flowers Tall Robust Plant Flower heads
attractive after plant dries in fall
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Miscanthus sinensis Silver Grass
Grasses
Pennisetum alopecuroides Fountain Grass
Phalaris arundinaceae Ribbon Grass
Festuca cinerea Silver Fescue
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Rushes and Sedges
Juncus and Carex Grass-like Tolerant of wet sites
well
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Planting Trees and Shrubs
When planting individual plants, dig the hole2-times wider than the root ball.When planting a group of plants, cultivate
the planting area to a 12-inch depth. Do not add amendments to individualplanting holes. Instead, incorporateamendments uniformly into the top 12
inches of the soil.Remove the wire or cord from around thestem of B&B plants.
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Planting Trees and Shrubs
Slice or break apart the root ball of pot-bound container-grown plants.Install guy wires on trees, if necessary,
but remove them after establishment.A water saucer may be used to helpdirect water to the roots, but it is onlytemporary.Mulch.Water to settle soil.
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If a water saucer is used, rake it outward andaway from the planting hole. Smooth saucer 2 to 3months after planting to keep it from eroding over
the roots
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Planting herbaceous plants
Plant in waves rather than as single plants Consider height and period/color of bloom Plant no deeper than previously growing
Provide 1 water per week until established Prune back vegetation prior to regrowth in
spring
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Mulch
A minimum of 2 needed, not more than 4 Keeps weeds down
Acts as sponge to capture heavy metals,oils and grease Holds moisture Maintains even temperature
Shredded hardwood mulch or pine strawrecommended
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Pondering Points
The planting plan design shouldinclude species that tolerate extremes.
a natural wild condition.
Native plants are best adapted to localclimate and once established aregenerally low maintenance.
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Pondering Points
(continued) When planted with native species rain
gardens can have additional value as a.
Shrub, trees, and ground covers absorbup to 14 times more rainwater than a
grass lawn.
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Maintenance?
No special maintenance required onceestablished
ou ne per o c an scap ngmaintenance
Weeding
Irrigation Pruning/vegetation removal
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For more information: Rain Gardens of Western Michigan
http://www.raingardens.org/Index.php Rain Gardens Gardening with water quality in
mind. http://www.mninter.net/~stack/rain/ Rain ardens infiltratin Wisconsin
http://www.dnr.state.wi.us/org/water/wm/nps/rg/
Credits: Residential Rain Gardens. Todd Hurt, UGA/
Cherokee Co. Extension. Milti-state Master Gardener Educator Training: Landscape Water QualityWorkshop, Griffin, GA. 2004.