Re: Sustainable Landscapes?
- Subject: Re: Sustainable Landscapes?
- From: M* V* <v*@sbcglobal.net>
- Date: Sat, 4 Jul 2009 07:16:35 -0700
Thanks for suggesting a discussion or sustainable landscaping.
I use California native plants because I love them, but also because
once established they are often drought tolerant. When I bought my
house it had a much
larger lawn area than it does now, and slowly I am replacing the lawn
with borders and beds of California native plants. My garden is
planned for the long term, so small trees will continue to grow while
the sun loving
bushes that do well beside them now, will eventually mature and die
as the trees mature and overgrow them and shade those places. I hope
to water less and less as the garden matures, the trees establish,
the shade increases, etc.
I also looked into using grey water, wanting to partially re-plumb
my house, but I have run into barriers of administrative sorts. Our
county encourages water conservation but then when I tried to get
going on using grey water I was discouraged from pursuing it.
One big one seems to be California's regulations on effluents and
local health departments. I think, but I could be wrong. I was
advised that such grey water could only be
used in underground drip systems with no surface distribution, that
kind of thing. I haven't abandoned the idea yet.
I have a septic tank currently, that eventually will be replaced with
s sewer hookup, and I am hoping to use the septic as a cistern,
leaving it in place, for rain water catch, and eventual garden
irrigation. But doing this presents problems too.
Anyone with advice on the kind of irrigation system that might
address grey water issues above, as well as be best for mediterranean
plants in terms of aridity loving plants and sustainability, let's
hear it.
I am redoing an old system right now, and trying to decide what sorts
of dispersal I need and want. Maybe there's a way to set it up so I
can use grey water AND nurture the long term garden plants.
[A thought I had the other day was regarding these big monster homes
one sees going up in California to replace single story ranches and
California bungalows (this in itself is a sorry state of affairs)
where a second story bathroom has to run water for five minutes
before hot water arrives. There should be regulations that if a
bathroom is X number of feet (and once again I am especially thinking
of these monster homes gobbling up the state I am native too) it must
have point of use water heaters. My own modest house has a water
heater at one end of the house, and bathrooms at the other end and
each time I take a shower I have to run the water down the drain
until warm water arrives. What a waste. (In France they have had
chauffe-eau for decades and decades.) I am working on putting those
small water heaters in each bathroom, to conserve both water and gas.]
Thanks.
Michael
On Jul 4, 2009, at 12:02 AM, yarrow@sfo.com wrote:
I've been looking forward to a discussion of water and landscapes.
Here are some random thoughts.
Graywater is one solution that lets you water your landscape. A huge
problem no one addresses is that drinking water is used to flush
toilets and do laundry. I read an essay once that suggested drinking
water needs to be filtered a lot more than it is, and nonpotable
water does not need all that treatment.
From ancient times, a garden was an oasis, so by definition it
included a water feature and was lush and produced food. That's what
I think about when I think about gardens, so I have trouble calling
those arid stonescapes with scratchy plants a garden. Maybe an
outdoor room, or (if it's native plants) a habitat.
Michael Reynolds's earthships in the New Mexico desert are fully self-
sufficient in energy and water, and they include gardens and sun
spaces. So there are ways to have water and lush gardens without
piping in water from other places. A fairly recent documentary on his
buildings made from mud, aluminum cans, glass bottles, and tires is
entitled Garbage Warrior.
It's a matter of scale. Here in northern California, I live in a
neighborhood where big houses are surrounded by lush lawns and water-
hungry plants. People spend hundreds of dollars a month to keep it
green. For the most part, the bigger the yard, the less it's used.
And then we have a community garden that accommodates around 150
gardeners on the amount of land used by 2-6 of those big houses.
If you've ever had a food garden, you know how small a space can be
incredibly productive. So if you're working within the piped-in-water
paradigm, the area around the house can be the food garden oasis, and
farther out you can have the habitat garden. That way, the plants are
not merely decorative.
Tanya
Sunset zone 17
At 7:47 AM -0700 6/26/09, Ben Wiswall wrote:
Hi All,
I'm hesitant to post this on the list-serve, as I'm afraid I will
alienate many people I would rather not. Nonetheless, I've been
mulling this topic over for some time, and would appreciate the
dialogue.
At an MGS Meeting in San Diego, I heard an early proponent of
ecological gardening lecture on sustainable landscaping. He gave a
good test for a garden's sustainability: leave the garden alone for
one year, then come back and see how it looks. Is it alive?
Completely overgrown, or just needing a thorough clean-up?
I haven't tried this on my own garden, but I did see the experiment
performed on a conventional southern California garden. A house in
our neighborhood went into bank foreclosure in Autumn 2007: the
sprinklers were shut off in November, and I monitored the garden over
the following year. By August, the plants that still looked good in
full sun were Brachychiton populneus, Leucophyllum, and Myoporum
parvifolium. Sheltered by the house and garden walls, Ficus nitida,
Duranta, and Pandorea pandorana looked presentable. Roses, Nandina,
Pittosporum, Phormium, and Hemerocallis were all severely stressed by
late summer, but revived with cooler Fall weather. A young
Jacaranda, a Liquidambar, the Trachelospermum, and the lawn were all
dead.
(The house has since been sold, the lawn replaced and the sprinklers
are back on.)
This got me thinking: what would happen to all of southern California
if we all ignored our gardens for a year?
I suspect the result would be a brittle, tinder-dry urban forest;
left alone, it would be fuel for devastating fires.
We in southern California depend on water transported long distances.
I once consulted a contractor about building a cistern, and he gave
me an informal quote of well over $20,000 US to build an underground
cistern capable of holding a winter's worth of rain from our roof.
This water would provide for less than five weeks of indoor water, OR
about 15 cm PER YEAR in the garden. And we would still require
distant water.
So what is sustainable? If sustainable means self-sufficient, we
aren't: southern California cannot support its nearly 20 million
inhabitants without importing most of its water.
Of the water used in the state, 77% goes to agriculture, 3% goes to
public works, 10% is used industry and commerce, and 10% is used in
residences. Of that 10%, about half, or 5% of the total, is used in
home landscaping.
Water, like all natural resources, should be used prudently, with
consideration both for protecting rare species and for the larger
sphere of life we all inhabit. It is likely that water will become
scarcer in the near future. Still, if every homeowner in the state
were to replace their lawns (and bananas, avocadoes, azaleas and
impatiens) with myoporum or gazania, we might save 2% of all the
water used in the state. I don't much care for lawns, but should I
care so much for saving so little water? Especially as a 10%
reduction in agricultural water use would yield a far greater savings
than ALL the water currently used in residential gardens.
In regions on the cooler, moister side of the mediterranean spectrum,
dry gardening is more popular: at the hotter, drier end of the
spectrum gardens tend to be a celebration of water. Living at the
drier end of the spectrum, I try to like dry gardens, but find they
leave me thirsty and unsatisfied beneath the blazing sun of inland
southern California. I would also feel unsafe against wildfires in a
garden that wasn't irrigated at least 3 times a month.
So what to do? I have a need for a certain amount of moisture in a
garden, enough to make me comfortable in the heat of summer and to
feel safer against wildfires, yet I don't want to waste a precious
resource. But even a semi-dry garden requires far more water than
can be provided for locally.
Any thoughts?
Ben Armentrout-Wiswall
Simi Valley, Inland Ventura County, Southern California
PS It can be a nuisance to get there, but I have a corollary photo
set on flickr.com titled Notes on the Urban Forest. The photos are
all captioned, but it works best as a slide show:
www.flickr.com/photos/27474976@N07/sets