Archive for month: June, 2016
Landscape Design: A Beautiful Wall
/0 Comments/in Construction Landscape Journal, Landscape, Municipal and Infrastructure Journal, Slope Stabilization, Sustainable Development /by Tanya RichardsGrand Opening: Hazelgrove Park in Surrey
/0 Comments/in Municipal and Infrastructure Journal, Parks, Playgrounds /by Tanya RichardsRain Water Harvesting
/0 Comments/in Environment, Landscape Journal /by Tanya RichardsRain Water Harvesting
British Columbia rain: too much in the winter, too little in summer
The “leftcoast” gets a lot of rain in the winter, so much it causes problems like flooding, sewer overflows, stream erosion, and polluted runoff into our waterways. But during our summer we get very little rain (less than Tucson, Arizona!).
So it’s hard to store enough water from spring rains to last long for summer irrigation. You need large cisterns or multiple rain-barrel systems to store enough water to have an impact on water usage. Simple practices like amending soil with compost, mulching, and smart watering are the first steps to storing and conserving water. The next step is capturing all that beautiful rain water that falls on our wet coast.
How much rain water can I catch?
The lower mainland of BC averages about 1,200 mm of rain per year, but 2/3 of it falls from November to March. Most areas in the region average less than 87 mm total rainfall for July and August.
The roof of your home is your greatest tool to harvest rainwater. To determine the amount of rain your roof catches, multiply your home’s width by its length (in feet) to estimate its footprint. Then estimate the portion of this area that drains to the downspout you’ll be using to catch your rain.
To calculate the runoff in liters from a metal roof’s 9 meter 10 meter “footprint” (90 square meters) in a climate averaging 304 millimeters of rain a year:
90 square meter roof 304 millimeters of average annual rainfall = 27,360 liters of rain falling on the roof in an average year.
90 m2 304 mm = 27,360 liters/average year
Multiply the above figure by the roof surface’s runoff coefficient 0.95*: 27,360 liters 0.95 = 25,992 liters running off the roof in an average year.
Storing Rain Water
Storing your harvested rainwater can be your greatest challenge. However, most homeowners don’t have room to store the thousands of gallons of collected rainwater that they use in landscape irrigation through our dry summers. Plus the cost of installing storage containers with enough volume to give you water through the entire summer would be very cost prohibitive and it would take a very long time to see the cost savings pay off it off.
Capacity and cost are directly related: decide how much you want to spend on building rainwater storage. Couple with this the practice of using mulches to regulate the soils moisture content and evaporation and you’re on your way to saving money and water throughout our hot summers and help you save water.
Vancouver Area Average Monthly Rainfall
Month | Jun | July | Aug | Sept | Oct | Nov | Dec | Jan | Mar | April | May | June |
Rainfall (inches) | 11 | 20 | 67.8 | 41.8 | 112.8 | 170.8 | 230.2 | 167.2 | 130.4 | 161.6 | 24 | 51 |
Mulch – Because Our Water Matters
/0 Comments/in Environment, Landscape Mulch, Summer Landscape Ideas /by Tanya Richards10 Steps to Stunning Landscape Design
/0 Comments/in Landscape, Landscape Journal, Summer Landscape Ideas /by Tanya RichardsYour yard is a very important natural resource that adds value to your home and enjoyment to your life. It contributes to a desirable, healthy community. Several important concepts will help you create an aesthetically pleasing, functional, and sustainable design.
The landscape design process includes the consideration of environmental conditions, your desires, and the elements and principles of design. The goal is to organize the natural and man-made features in your yard into an aesthetic, functional, and environmentally sustainable landscape.
The process begins with a site inventory and analysis of soil, drainage, climate conditions, and existing vegetation. This is a critical step for both plant selection and placement and locating family activities and functions. It’s important because the same climate conditions that affect the plants—temperature, humidity, rain, wind, and sunlight—also affect you, the user. The next step is to make a list of your needs and desires—this helps you determine how your yard and landscape will be used. The site and user analyses will also help you establish a theme for the form and style of your design. The functional diagram is then used to locate the activity spaces on the site and from this diagram a conceptual plan is developed. The last step is a final design that includes all the hardscape and planting details that are necessary for installation.
When designing a residential landscape, the most important step is to put a plan on paper. In the article Landscape Design: Ten Important Things to Consider the author provides ten important points to ensure a stunning landscape design. We invite you to give this great resource a read!