Publisher's Letter

Contributors


Meet Vickie Kilimanjaro: Eyewitness to History

1. Ready, Set … GO! Get Organized
2. Pitfalls of Home-based Business and How to Avoid Them
3. Answering the Call to Adopt; how Deana joined our family
4.Raingardens

1. Ace That Performance Review!
2. Getting the Job Done When Everyone Else is Socializing
3. Working Smarter with Microsoft Office
4. Hispanic Recruiting: Is There Something To It?

1. C'mon, Let's Laugh!
2. Can You See Me?

1. Teacher Recruitment and Retention in North Carolina, Part 4; Funding North Carolina’s Public Schools
2. The College Essay
3. Power of One

1. Winning Ideas from Winning Women with Nancy Knott
2. Making the Most of Your Marketing Materials
3. Proof of Concept: Poised for Success

1. Shine the Spotlight on Your Strengths!
2. A Four-Step P.L.A.N. for Successful New Year’s Resolutions

1. The Tradition of Hamburger Money
2. J ANUARY IS STALKING AWARENESS MONTH

1. Mirrors
2. Lett’s Set a Spell: Mama’s Last Christmas

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Chrystal Bartlett, PIO
N.C. Department of Environment and Natural Resources

Raingardens

Raingardens are a great way for homeowners and businesses to reduce polluted runoff from their property. Attractive gardens add value to the property, reduce time spent mowing and provide a shelter for area wildlife. To spread the word about raingardens, the North Carolina Department of Environment and Natural Resources (NC DENR) wanted to build one at the state fairgrounds in Raleigh. With help from our partners at the N.C. Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, the N.C. State Cooperative Extension Service, its Master Gardener program, and Logan’s Trading Company Garden Shop, we built the one you see here. [Ed-photo named PPT7 should appear in close proximity on page to these words. Tx!]

Our first step was the same as any property owner: find a site where water naturally drains. State fair and cooperative extension staff walked the fairgrounds and ended up very close to the existing “garden area.” The site has a catch basin that collects stormwater, but this unfiltered water is full of trash and sediment. We placed the garden in front of the catch basin so it could filter the stormwater.

The size of the garden depends on the amount of rain it will receive. If the garden is fed from a gutter or drainpipe, you can measure the roof and use these calculations to size your garden. The same simple calculations can be used for stormwater coming from a driveway or basketball court.

Now that you know how big an area you’ll need, take a look at what you’re standing on. If you live near the coast, you’re in luck! Sandy soil drains well and needs no amending. The rest of North Carolina is home to red clay which doesn’t drain very well at all! To remedy this situation, do what we did at the fairgrounds. Dig a little deeper, then add sand and small rocks to help drainage.

For all gardens, build up the edges a bit to hold the water and then flatten them slightly on the downhill side. Most raingardens are designed to hold a one-inch rainfall (a nice average for most of North Carolina) but need to accommodate overflows. By flattening the downhill side, overflowing water will “sheet” across the soil instead of channeling an erosion-causing furrow.

Ready to start digging? Find a few friends and it will go faster. Backfill the hole with the soil you just displaced or add topsoil. Whatever you do, don’t fill the hole flush to the ground. Leave a bit of a bowl for water to collect and enough depth to mound the soil slightly at your plantings. Raingardens should drain slowly, but not take more than three days to empty. If yours takes longer, add more sand and rocks to improve drainage. If that doesn’t do the trick, make the bowl shallower. Mosquitoes start breeding after three days and while we do want a natural habitat shelter, skeeters are not exactly an endangered species!

Native plants are definitely the way to go with these gardens. The fact they are already used to the climate is just the buffer you need for health because these plants will also be called upon to live in very wet and very dry conditions. That’s a lot to ask of a plant, so ‘go native’ and save yourself some expensive replanting. Here’s a list of what’s native to your area. Here’s a list. Plants can be mulched or grass can be allowed to grow—your choice! If you do choose mulch, go for the shredded hardwood—pine bark floats just away!

The last step sounds a bit backwards, but it’s true: you have to water the garden at least until the plants get established or Mother Nature decides to rain on the Old North State again. If your area is operating under water restrictions, observe them. But take heart for the future. If there’s even a little bit of rain in your area, your raingarden will be the last part of your yard to dry out.

Maintenance is fairly simple once your garden is established. Pull out some weeds, clear out the trash and check to see that the depth remains the same over time. One of the items these raingardens filter is good old dirt from your yard, so you may need to do a little excavating from time to time.

Now it is time for gardeners everywhere to do what they do best in the winter months: plan for the warm season ahead! Gardening is always easiest from a comfy armchair, so get your plans, plants and planting buddies all lined up. Come spring, you’ll be ready to dig!


Chrystal Bartlett currently works as Stormwater Awareness & Outreach Coordinator for the N.C. Department of Environment and Natural Resources where she recently launched a new stormwater Web site, www.ncstormwater.org. She is also a freelance voiceover talent and image management consult. Before working at DENR, she worked as a DJ, news reporter and at several ad agencies. Chrystal graduated from N.C. State University with a B.A. in Communication and an M.A. in Public Relations.

Chrystal Bartlett lives and writes in Raleigh, NC. When not at her 'paying job' she does freelance voicework and image consulting.

She can be reached weekdays at 919.715.4116 or at chrystal.bartlett@ncmail.net.