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RT @busygardening: Diy Japanese Garden: Easy step by step guide to make you own Japanese Garden, with pictured sample garden designs. http://bit.ly/9gBekb

RT @busygardening: Diy Japanese Garden: Easy step by step guide to make you own Japanese Garden, with pictured sample garden designs. http://bit.ly/9gBekb

Diy Japanese Garden: Easy step by step guide to make you own Japanese Garden, with pictured sample garden designs. http://bit.ly/9gBekb

Photo: Japanese Fest @ The Botanical Garden! http://tumblr.com/xoehtif68

@zobalderas The botanical garden. A Japanese festival at the garden. And a friend.

Rain Gardens: Managing Water Sustainably in the Garden and Designed Landscape

Rain Gardens: Managing Water Sustainably in the Garden and Designed Landscape
$23.07

From Booklist
The demand for water is growing exponentially as supplies dwindle, so it becomes ever more critical for home gardeners, professional landscapers, construction engineers, and city planners to consider rainfall and snowfall management. Structures as small as a garden shed and hard surfaces as massive as an arena parking lot each have an environmental effect through the loss of water as uncontained runoff. Rain gardening emphasizes the capture and reuse of water within residential and commercial landscapes by using such techniques as bioretention ponds, storm-water chains, green roofs, and permeable paving. In this unique and essential resource, Dunnett and Clayden expertly and comprehensively explain the various methods of creating rain-gardening systems in clear, precise, and enthusiastic language; augment their proposals with simple line drawings and color photographs; provide a concise directory of suitable plants; and draw on inspiring case histories of successful rain-garden projects throughout the U. S and Europe. Carol HaggasCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review“Here you can learn how to capture rain and snowmelt runoff, how to disconnect your downspouts, create a green roof, bioretention ponds, storm-water chains and permeable paving. ” (Oregonian )

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3 Responses to “Rain Gardens: Managing Water Sustainably in the Garden and Designed Landscape”

  • Taariq says:

    Let me first state that this is an excellent book. However, it is really a book about taking things to the next level. If you are looking for solid how-to information about installing a rain garden in your back yard, you might be disappointed. Landscape architects, designers and accomplished amateurs with advanced skill sets looking to handle water both innovatively and creatively will delight in this book. I did . . . but then I already have three rain gardens in my own landscape and teach how-to classes on installing them. If the concept of rain gardens intrigues you and you are looking for the basics on a DIY level, the free, downloadable rain garden manual from the University of Wisconsin is still the best source of that information, as of January 2008. This book has a decidedly European flavor to it. And why shouldn’t it? It is written by a couple of Brits. Although I am hard-pressed to see how some of the models given in the book will pass muster with the Americans with Disabilities Act, codes and other regulatory bodies, they should indeed stimulate the mind. The examples (of which there are many) also include public and even larger municipal installations. I find this a good thing for Americans to be exposed to. The Europeans are far ahead of us in green thinking. Included are some examples of essentially, municipal civil engineering projects both implemented and functioning with panache. This is a book that I value having in my personal library. Someone looking for basic information may not.

  • Anonymous says:

    This book only covers about 16 pages of rain gardens out of ~175 pages. A more appropriate title should be its subtitle, not rain gardens. If you’re looking for rain garden info, this is not the book. It is a good reference for other sustainable water practices – standing water retention, swimming ponds, green roofs, etc.

  • Chrissy says:

    A thorough treatment of all possible ways of dealing with storm water run-off, not just rain gardens. No detailed instructions on “how-to” which I had expected.

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