Tag: rainwater

  • Thursday, April 22, 6:00 pm – 7:00 pm – Sponge Landscapes

    This Native Plant Trust webinar on April 22 at 6 pm introduces sponge landscapes as an accessible method for managing water in urban and suburban areas. Using layers and combinations of native trees and groundcovers, we can put the sponge back into our developed spaces—intercepting, absorbing, and retaining rainwater before it floods or pollutes the landscape. Learn how to rewild and soften the hardscape with durable native plants, creating a sponge landscape. Led by Anna Fialkoff the fee is $12 for NPT members, $15 for nonmembers. Register at http://www.nativeplanttrust.org/events/sponge-landscape/

  • Friday, July 21, 1:00 pm – 2:00 pm – Green Garden Infrastructure Webinar

    New England Wild Flower Society online webinars are a great way to learn something new. On July 21 at 1 pm, Anna Fialkoff will talk about Green Garden Infrastructure. Green infrastructure is the backbone of an environmentally responsible garden. Learn how to incorporate low-cost and low-tech solutions for managing stormwater, harvesting rainwater,and reducing excess heat and pollution. Anna Fialkoff will introduce you to rain gardens, green roofs, permeable paving, and other landscape elements you can build without the help of an engineer or landscape architect. $10 for NEWFS members, $13 for nonmembers. Register at http://www.newfs.org/learn/our-programs/live-webinar-green-garden-infrastructure.

  • Wednesday, January 13, 12:00 noon – Connecting the Drops: Creating Abundance with Rainwater Harvesting

    Climate change presents humankind with immense challenges, including how to adapt to water shortages in an abundant and resilient manner. Rainwater harvesting and reuse offers solutions for whatever our future holds! Too often, we let precious water drip off of our rooftops, driveways and streets and spill into gutters and stormdrains where it rushes away loaded with all sorts of pollutants and pours directly into our much-diminished rivers. Jeremiah Kidd offers hope and resilience with examples from incredibly productive projects in areas that receive less than 12 inches of precipitation a year. These same solutions can be used in many regions to conserve our scarce freshwater resources. Jeremiah will review techniques including retaining water on the landscape using one rock dams and swales to channeling roof water to cisterns and planting beds. We may not be able to change the amount of precipitation we get, but we most certainly can change our drought mentality by focusing on the abundance of water we waste rather than the scarcity of water we wish we had.

    Jeremiah Kidd’s work is directed by Permaculture Principles – a whole system science based approach to design. He is a certified Permaculture Designer and is an accredited and certified Rainwater Catchment Professional through ARCSA (American Rainwater Catchment Systems Association). He has taught and consulted on several projects in the USA, Africa, Central America and Asia. Prior to establishing San Isidro Permaculture, Jeremiah was a partner at Living Structures, Inc., a permaculture-based design/installation green building firm in Santa Fe, New Mexico.

    Established in 2000, San Isidro Permaculture is a design and installation company focused on water catchment, grey water systems, native and edible plant landscapes, erosion control, and land restoration. San Isidro Permaculture has served Santa Fe and the surrounding area working for the private sector, federal and local governments, the film industry, and commercial projects.  Image below from www.weareallfarmers.org.

    This free Ecological Landscaping Alliance webinar will take place at 12 noon EST on Wednesday, January 13. See more at: http://www.ecolandscaping.org/event/webinar-connecting-the-drops-creating-abundance-with-rainwater-harvesting/#sthash.9bBP8nsn.dpuf