Posts Tagged ‘ocean friendly gardens’

Ocean Friendly Gardens – May 20th – SAVE THE DATE

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

Ocean Friendly Gardens

The Surfrider Foundation of Huntington /Seal Beach, Ocean Friendly Gardens Program, would like to welcome members and anyone interested to a presentation on May 20th by Sage Landscape Designs. The presentation will discuss Ocean Friendly Gardens and how to create beautiful residential landscapes that add value and pleasure to your home while helping to improve our coast and ocean environment.

Ocean Friendly Gardens is a new Surfrider Foundation program we are launching in our local chapter. An Ocean Friendly Garden includes the three principles of: Conservation, Permeability and Retention – what we like to call “CPR for Our Coast and Ocean.”

*  Conservation is a garden design and plant selection that eliminates the need for chemical fertilizers, pesticides and other unnecessary pollutants that can run off your garden and foul our coastal waterways and ocean;
*  Permeability is the principle of replacing “hardscape” like walkways, patios and other surfaces, with safe alternatives that allow rainwater to soak into the ground before it “sheets” off your landscape and into the stormdrain – carrying pollutants along the way;
*  Retention devices are included in the garden design to capture excess rainwater – again, eliminating polluted runoff from exiting our properties — while creating an attractive natural look to the garden.

Through these three simple principles, homeowners can create beautiful landscapes that thrive in the southern California climate, provide micro-habitats to make your garden a more pleasurable place to visit, and dramatically eliminate pollution – even in the wet season and years like this one.

Sage Landscape Designs learned their trade on the job and have created numerous beautiful gardens in Huntington Beach and the surrounding area.

Surfrider Foundation’s Ocean Friendly Gardens program includes not only education for homeowners to design and transform their own landscape – but we are coordinating volunteers to help others in need to create these unique gardens throughout our chapter’s area.

The Dry Garden: ‘Ocean Friendly Gardens’ is a guide to reining in runoff – LA Times

Monday, March 1st, 2010

From Los Angeles Times 

The Dry Garden: ‘Ocean Friendly Gardens’ is a guide to reining in runoff
February 26, 2010 | 10:00 am

Last week I said Bob Perry’s book “Landscape Plants for California Gardens” was “all the book you will need if you live in the Golden State.” In a case of floored admiration for a book dedicated to California plants, I may have exaggerated because I now find myself recommending another book aimed specifically at gardeners here. This one addresses how to lay out your landscape. It is “Ocean Friendly Gardens” by Douglas Kent.

Green_KentGarden

Some of you may be familiar with Kent’s work as an Orange County landscape designer, or his 2003 contribution to The Times’ Home section on fire-resistant flora, or his all-too-timely 2005 book “Firescaping.”

His new volume, a slender 105 pages published by the Surfrider Foundation, turns from fire to water. What, you might ask, does the ocean have to do with gardening? In California, Kent would reply: Everything. All the rain that we don’t catch during the winter and all of the irrigation spilled into the streets from our sprinklers in the warm months end up as storm water. “Water running into the ocean is not inherently harmful,” Kent writes. “It is the stuff attached to it and the stuff it picks up on the way to the ocean that is. Fertilizers, pesticides, oils, cleaning solutions and organic debris all run off a landscape.”

In many ways, this is less a book than a manual on how to design and manage a garden that captures and keeps the water that it gets, either from rain or irrigation. Its design principles of conservation, permeability and retention are a lifeguard, argues Kent — one that protects the ocean from us.

Starting with a simple diagram of a standard suburban home, Kent breaks down a yard by how it will be used. In a simple drawing, patches of lawn immediately by the entrance and back door are designated “high use.” Perimeters become “low use,” and side gardens are deemed “medium use.”

From there he helps to calculate how much rain a homeowner can expect to run off the roof. Next, he shows us how to identify areas where it can drain and infiltrate.

For those who don’t like fine print, there are diagrams for just about every step from diffusion devices, debris catchments and then full-on planting schemes. This book is particularly helpful for those working on sloped sites. Those on flat ones may find themselves shopping for a bulldozer to create some topography that can double up as bioswales, dry creek beds and vernal ponds.

There is even a chart breaking down the pros and cons of different erosion controls for sloped sites. (Kent’s favorite appears to be terracing.)

Finally, there are chapters on fertilizers, lawn care and weeding. This part of the book is clearly not aimed at the driest of us dry gardeners. Yet “Ocean Friendly Gardens” shares a water-wise ethos with the native and Mediterranean gardening movements. This book strives to keep the things that we may apply to our yards where they belong and out of the ocean. Above all, it strives to protect the wild environment that drew so many of us to California in the first place.

– Emily Green