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Snohomish Conservation District 528 - 91st Ave NE, Ste A Lake Stevens, WA 98258-2538 Non-Profit Org. U.S. Postage PAID Lake Stevens, WA Permit No. 26 The Nexus Features of a Zero Runoff Yard By Kailyn Wentz, Integrated Media/Social Marketing Specialist Spring 2013 Serving Snohomish County and Camano Island Election News The Snohomish Conservation District Board of Supervisors re-elected Steve VanValkenburg to the open seat. He was the only person who filed for the position by the deadline. Mark Craven has applied for the appointed position, subject to approval by the Conservation Commission. For more information, call 425-335-5634. Reusable Bedding Video Did you know that composted bedding can be put back to work in your horse stalls as an alternative to wood shavings or pellets? It’s light and fluffy, with a pleasant earthy smell, and is very absorbent. Compared to wood shavings or pellets, compost significantly reduces dust and allergens in stalls. Bill next to one of many rain barrels he uses to collect rain water. The Lider driveway allows stormwater to filter through. Bill Lider seems to know every plant and creature that resides on his residential lot outside of Lynnwood. From the pileated woodpeckers that love his red-osier dogwoods to the spotted towhees that occupy his “engineered” brush pile, every plant has a purpose and every creature has a place. Even the moles are appreciated. “They’re great stormwater engineers,” Bill comments. Permeable paver driveways - Rather than solid concrete, pavers have spaces in between, usually filled with gravel or plants, that allow water to drain down through and soak into the ground, rather than running off the property to a ditch or stream. Questions and Answers with Bill Moles aren’t the only ones getting creative with stormwater. Bill and his wife Sally have made zero stormwater runoff a priority on their property in unincorporated Snohomish County. With a rain barrel at every downspout, not one - but two - types of permeable paving, and plantings for wildlife throughout their yard, the Liders are truly making a difference and enjoying it, too. Recently I was able to tour their property with Bill as my guide to see and understand all the features they’re using. Q: Where did you first learn about permeable pavers and infiltrating stormwater? A: Through my work (Bill is a Civil engineer). Zero Runoff Features Rain barrels under every downspout The turfstone drive leading to the carport was a good compromise to a traditional driveway because we didn’t want to lose the lawn for entertaining and relaxing. According to Bill, the rain barrels are definitely worth it if you operate them with a dispersion system. They do a good job of reducing runoff and provide a great environmental benefit. His barrels are set up to drain between storms; soaker hoses are routed throughout landscaping to disperse the water and deeply water plantings, making them drought-tolerant in summer. Rain gauges - Rain gauges help Bill determine watering needs so he doesn’t overwater. Native plantings The Lider property was one of the first certified Backyard Wildlife Habitats in the state. This is a designation from the National Wildlife Federation that certifies yards that provide the four elements of habitat: food, water, cover and places to raise young. Q: Why did you build your permeable driveways? A: The asphalt was going bad and I was attracted by the uniqueness of permeable pavers. They were environmentally-friendly and helped meet the goal of zero runoff. Q: If you could offer one piece of advice to other landowners, what would it be? A: If you are unsure, I’d recommend that you hire someone to help with the design and/or construction. It’s worth the money to make sure it comes out right the first time. The small cost savings by doing these things yourself is not worth it. The District received funding from the Western Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education Program to work with a few horse owners in Snohomish County to try composted bedding. If interested, contact Caitlin Price Youngquist at caitlin@snohomishcd. org or call the office at 425-335-5634, ext. 4. For a video of this program, go to: http://www.betterground.org/ resources-2/videos/. Inside 2012 Award Winners Collecting Rain Water Grounds for Your Soil Firewise Communities Rain Gardens & Horses Puget Sound Month Barley Fodder--Yum! Events and more Q: Would you recommend use of permeable pavers to others? A: Pavers do have their drawbacks and if I were to do it over, I might use pervious concrete instead. Pervious concrete wasn’t really available at the time I installed it. See a video of my tour at www.betterground.org Learn about capturing rain water on page 4. SCD 1 District 2012 Award Winners Shine Lifetime Achievement Award Mary Margaret Haugen The District’s first Lifetime Achievement Award was given to former Senator Mary Margaret Haugen for her tireless efforts supporting agriculture and conservation. Ms. Haugen served in the State Legislature for many years, and began looking into conservation districts and other special purpose districts early in her tenure. Low Impact Development - Cooperator of the Year Larry and Kalleen Ormand Larry and Kalleen Ormand were one of our first rain garden customers when the Community Conservation Program began in 2010. They installed their rain garden in Spring 2012, with design help from engineer Derek Hann. The Ormand’s have done a great job keeping us posted on how it’s working. They enjoy educating their friends and neighbors about their new landscape feature and watching it soak up the rain. Having grown up on a family farm on Camano Island, Ms. Haugen was aware of conservation programs and supported efforts to establish a Farmland Preservation Former Senator Mary Margaret Haugen receives office in Olympia and to create the Lifetime Achievement Award from Mark Cra- long-term stable funding for all ven (District Chair), and Monte Marti (District Washington conservation districts Manager). through assessments. The Snohomish Conservation District and the agriculture community are most grateful for Ms. Haugen’s steadfast efforts. Commercial Farm of the Year Carleton Farm, Inc, Reid and Darren Carleton Reid and Mary Carleton and their son Darren own and operate a 60-acre horse stable, produce, and agro-tourism farm near Lake Stevens. They first opened their doors in 1966 as a dairy. Over the years, they have converted it to a horse stable and produce farm with a strong agro-tourism component. The Carleton’s have worked with the District since the farm’s early days (Reid served as a District Board Supervisor) and have been eager to cooperate as their farm evolved. The Carleton’s have taken advantage of several programs, from guidance on removing their manure lagoon to, most recently, working with the District and WSU as one of our compost research sites. They have hosted numerous tours talking about the program and have always been eager to learn and adapt to new challenges. Small Farms of the Year Elva and Jerry Van Donge John Natterstad accepts the Wildlife Farm of the Year Award from District Habitat Specialist Ryan Williams. John manages properties for Bethlehem Lutheran Church, including Wilcox Farm in Marysville, where the District’s habitat team has done several projects. Wildlife Farm of the Year Bethlehem Lutheran Church / Wilcox Farm Bethlehem Lutheran Church began working with the District in 2005. From the start, the Church and their farm’s renter have wanted to keep horses out of Quilceda Creek, but funding was the biggest hurdle. The planting area along Quilceda Creek turned out to be bigger than we thought, so we enrolled them in the Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program. The Marysville Church and it’s volunteers have already planted 1.2 acres and installed 900 feet of fencing. They plan to finish the 4.4 acre planting area this Spring with Adopt A Stream Foundation crews. They’re also going to install an off-stream watering system. John Natterstad, the property manager, has been very eager to work with us and plans to develop Wilcox Farm into an outdoor classroom and tour location to highlight Best Management Practices. The Church is also actively involved in sustainable agriculture on the property across the street from Wilcox Farm, where people can rent P-Patches to grow food for themselves or local food banks. Elva Donge has worked with the District since 2001, installing gutters, downspouts, underground outlets, graveled sacrifice areas, and comDebbie Young, Village Community Services post bins on her farm. She removes her horses Leif Fixen (left) and Mark Craven (right) with the Village Community Services has been providing quality from pastures during the winter and practices winner of the Commercial Farm of the Year Award, residential support and vocational services to adults with rotational grazing during the growing season. Darren Carleton. disabilities for more than 40 years in Snohomish, Island and She has worked extensively on her pastures to Skagit counties. Their support services and advocacy helps these individuals remove moss, control weeds, manage nutrients, over-seed when needed and add integrate and fully participate in their communities. lime. Her farm is an example of excellent land stewardship. Partnership Awards Black Dog Ranch, Shannon and Brian Finch Shannon and Brian Finch own five acres near Stanwood, complete with three horses and two donkeys. Shannon contacted us after hearing that the District helps property owners with farm planning. The Finches had been battling mud and manure for a long time. Since our first visit in March 2012, the Finches have built compost bins and exclusion fences, and hosted a hand’s-on fence workshop led by Monte Gerdes. Since then, Shannon says she spends time just gazing at her bins because, in her words, “they are so pretty”. Merit Farm Steve and Dena Adkins Steve and Dena Adkins are new clients, eager to learn from our experience and make use of our free technical help. Their farm includes two horses in the Harvey Creek area of the Stillaguamish Watershed. In the last six months, the Adkins corrected all the issues we identified on their farm that could harm water quality. Last fall they also took advantage of our cost share program to install both a heavy-use area and a compost bin. They installed a drainage system on their own that our engineers designed for them. They have been a true pleasure to work with. SCD 2 For the past several years, Consultant Debbie Young has picked up and delivers brochures and mailers from the District office so her clients can label and process them. This helps District staff update publications and get ready for events. It also helps her clients contribute while learning new skills. Scott Chase, WSU Island County Shore Stewards Scott Chase has partnered with the Snohomish Conservation District on several projects over the years and has been a great help as we expand our efforts on Camano Island. Scott’s upbeat manner, can-do attitude, and thorough knowledge of the people and places on Camano Island have been invaluable to District staff. He has helped with bluff and rain barrel classes, recycling events, the Port Susan Open Houses and a host of other events. Scott is a tireless supporter and promoter of our conservation programs and services. ~ continued Left: David Capocci talks with a District farm planner about his hoop house garden area. David has been a great supporter of District programs and will be hosting three seminars at his Granite Falls ranch later this year. David, Glenn Budlow and Tim Leingang have taken great care to create a working alpaca ranch and guest camping facility while protecting natural resources in the Mountain Loop Highway area east of Granite Falls. David Capocci accepts his award from Mark Craven. Cooperator of the Year Paca Pride Guest Ranch, David Capocci, Glenn Budlow and Tim Leingang The partners at Paca Pride Guest Ranch are innovators who began their guest ranch/alpaca farm with a bare piece of land eleven miles outside of Granite Falls. They researched farm layout, crops, barns, composting, and fodder feeding. They installed fencing and numerous trees and shrubs to protect a streamside corridor. Paca Pride has been the site of two farm tours, and will play host again in 2013 for a sustainable agriculture workshop. David Capocci, educated on permaculture principles, has offered to teach that for District events, as well as host our groups in their yurt classroom. Always positive and upbeat, David has been and continues to be a great advocate for Snohomish Conservation District’s helpful, innovative programs. Low Impact Development - Partnership Award Philomena Kedziorski, WSU Rain Garden Program Coordinator Philomena has done a wonderful job promoting the Conservation District programs to private homeowners and organizations. She’s arranged multiple rain garden site visits for us, and a few rain barrel site visits as well. And she encourages WSU Extension’s Master Gardener volunteers to do the same. She is easy to work with and always willing to help plant a garden or give planting advice. Philomena could almost be considered a third member of the District’s Low Impact Development team with all she contributes. Philomena Kedziorski Volunteer of the Year John Marsh, WSU Extension Master Gardener John is a great supporter of our rain garden program. He has been to all but one of our rain garden planting events and helped with multiple planting plans, always with a smile. A former teacher, John easily engaged kids during Columbia Elementary’s planting day. Dedicated volunteers are critical to the success of our programs, so we appreciate John and all the other Master Gardeners who have helped further our on-the-ground efforts. Employee of the Year Stacy Aleksich, Community Conservation Program Manager Stacy Aleksich Stacy has been with the District for two and a half years and served Whidbey Island Conservation District prior to that. She coordinates the District’s work with cities and works on low impact development practices like rain gardens, rain barrels and cisterns, and permeable paving. John Marsh helping a student plant the Columbia Elementary rain garden in Mukilteo. Salmon, Slugs and Water Samples Free Classes for Schools by Roger Kelley, Snohomish Conservation District Educator The student video-recording his classmates didn’t notice where he was standing until water from a small stream soaked though his shoes. Even then he didn’t move, intent on recording the hands of several of his fourth grade classmates as they turned over a log looking for ‘decomposers’ ~ centipedes, slugs, and other small creatures that break down dead and decaying organisms. Another group of students recorded ‘biotic ecosystem components’ on a worksheet, while a third group learned that invasive plants can do bad things, like take over an area by displacing the native plants, thereby eliminating important food and shelter for native wildlife. A week later a group of sixth graders at another school measured the diameter of a Douglas Fir tree and converted that number into years, discovering that this tree, tucked in a corner of their schoolyard, was alive back when Thomas Jefferson lived in the White House, 212 years ago. These students were learning about some of the Northwest’s incredible natural systems in a class taught by a Conservation District educator. This class and 11 others are offered to Snohomish County schools as part of a new partnership between Snohomish County Surface Water Management and the Snohomish Conservation District. Under separate funding, the District will also offer the same 12 classes to Camano Island schools as well as a class on shellfish for Stanwood-Camano and Marysville school district schools. Snohomish Conservation District’s expanded K-12 education program provides free classes on a variety of environmental topics including Puget Sound salmon, Northwest ecology, native plants and how to prevent pollution. Classes are available to any school in unincorporated Snohomish County, and to schools in cities where at least 25 percent of the student population lives in unincorporated Snohomish County. Whenever possible, the outdoor classes are held on school grounds, preferably an area that borders a pond or stream. These little-visited areas of the schoolyard are often a perfect setting for taking water samples, learning about stream or pond insects, or evaluating the importance of native plants. Snohomish County teachers - see class descriptions and register at http://www1.co.snohomish. wa.us/Departments/Public_Works/Divisions/SWM/Ed. Camano Island and Stanwood teachers - if you are interested in the shellfish or native plant class, contact Roger Kelley for more information at roger@snohomishcd.org. SCD 3 Don’t Let It Drain Away - Start Collecting Rain Water Today! by Stacy Aleksich, Community Conservation Program Manager Collecting rain water is not new; cultures around the world have done this for thousands of years for agricultural, as well as domestic, uses. In many countries and some U.S. cities, it is now required to consider rain water collection in all new building construction. Our neighbors up in the San Juan Islands have even built a number of homes with rain water collection systems as their only water supply. This could very well be the wave of the future. STEP 2. Calculate Your Collection Potential Just how much water can really drain off that roof area? Well, you’d be surprised. Let’s say you want to place your barrels in the backyard, near your raised beds, and about one-fourth of your roof area (let’s assume 500 square feet) drains to this downspout. How much water do you think would flow off that area in a one-inch rain storm? 249 gallons! That’s enough to fill five standard rain barrels, which hold about 50 gallons each. Why Collect Rain Water? It’s FREE (minus the cost of your collection system, of course). It’s better for your plants. Rain water is free of additives such as chlorine or fluoride, which are not good for plants. Rain water is also slightly acidic, which helps plants better use soil nutrients. It reduces runoff. Rain barrels can divert a small amount of runoff from roofs, reducing flooding in local streams and overwhelming storm systems. A series of rain barrels can be connected to save even more rain water. If you let the collected rain drain into your landscaping or lawn between rainstorms, you’ll be imitating Nature more closely (a very good thing!) and deeply watering your yard all winter, making it more drought tolerant in the summer. CALCULATING YOUR POTENTIAL RAIN WATER VOLUME Square feet (sf) of catchment area × efficiency* × rainfall in feet (inches/12)** × 7.48 conversion factor = gallons of rainwater available annually * 0.8 for a composite roof or 0.9 for a metal roof ** http://www.idcide.com/weather/wa/index.htm Now, think about all the times it rains in one year. Areas along the coast (Edmonds, Lynnwood, Mukilteo, Everett, Stanwood, etc.) get around 35 inches of rain each year – that’s almost 9,000 gallons a year from the 500 square foot roof area! As you move east, closer to the mountains, areas get more and more rainfall. Arlington and Monroe get close to 50 inches a year – or nearly 12,000 gallons from that 500 square foot roof area. I told you it adds up quickly. Given this, you can expect that your collection system will overflow during each storm once it’s full. It is important to route that overflow safely away from building foundations and, if possible, allow it to soak into the ground. It saves precious drinking water. Did you know – only one percent of all the water on our planet is drinkable! Irrigating with rain water conserves our limited drinking water supplies. It makes your chores easier. Collecting rain water from outbuildings to water your gardens or livestock will relieve you from having to drag hoses and buckets around your property. How to Get Started Collecting rain water means diverting it from your downspouts and storing it in large, durable containers. Collection systems come in a variety of shapes and sizes. The bigger the container, the better, since runoff from even a small roof area adds up quickly. Collecting rain water in the Puget Sound area comes with some challenges. Here are the steps to take to see if collecting rain water is right for you. STEP 1. Determine Your Uses Knowing how, and where, you’ll use this collected rain water will help determine how large a system you will need. For example, if you intend to water all of your flower beds, plus a few vegetable beds, you’ll need about 2,500–3,000 gallons to get you through the summer (Note: this does not include any water for your lawn). You’ll want to set your system up as close as possible to where the water will be used. That means finding the nearest downspout to your garden or pasture. Put gravity to use - an uphill collection location lets gravity move water to where you need it. Septic tanks (new ones!) make a great collection system, often much cheaper than plastic tanks. They hold 1,500 gallons each. STEP 3. Choose Your Containers Now that you know how much rain you could collect, and how water much you may need to get you through the summer, it’s time to choose your containers. Here are the main things to consider: Size and/or number of barrels or tanks. How much water do you need for your intended uses? How much space do you have for your collection area? Above or below ground? Buried tanks require a pump to move water to where you need it, but a below ground tank may allow you to collect more water. Pumps also make it easier to use your water regardless of elevation changes between the tank and watering destination. Type of plastic. If you choose a plastic barrel or tank, pick darker colors, or plan to paint the barrel/tank with an oil-based paint (or other paints intended for use on plastics). This will help keep UV rays (light) out to reduce algae growth to a minimum. Also, be sure to ask what was previously stored or transported in all barrels and tanks. It should only be food-grade substances no chemicals or toxic components. Chemical residue can mix with your rain water and harm your plants. Other considerations are aesthetics and how much you want to spend. Permits may be required for tanks 5,000 gallons or larger, and for electrical pump systems. Contact your city or county planning department, or ask District staff for assistance (contact information at end of article). STEP 4. Assemble Your Collection System Farms can store and use rain water for irrigation and to get water to their animals by collecting rain runoff from barn roofs and other outbuildings. SCD 4 Every system needs a few vital components. While the actual parts will vary somewhat based on your chosen container(s), there are endless configurations and creative solutions for building a rain water collection system. Your local hardware store should be able to help you find the needed parts. Or contact us, we’re happy to help! Check out online how-to videos to see other ideas, too! ~ continued The following is a basic list of what you’ll need: 1. Barrels or tanks 2. A sturdy, level base (cinder blocks work well for barrels, raising them up enough to get a watering can under the spigot. A level gravel pad is needed for tanks and larger systems) 3. Downspout extender or adaptations 4. Secure container lids 5. Inlet with screen (fine window or gutter mesh so mosquitos can’t get in the container to lay eggs) 6. Spigot 7. Overflow, routed away from a building’s foundation 8. Clean-out access 9. Perhaps a first flush diverter (see below) Rain Barrel Workshops Are Popular! These class participants learned the value of teamwork during one of the District’s popular build-your-own rain barrel classes held in March. In case you missed it... Snohomish Conservation District has held three rain barrel workshops in the past four months in Arlington, Stanwood, and on Camano Island as part of our Department of Ecology grants. They have been lively and hand’s-on, not to mention sold out! Rest assured though, we will continue to offer “Build Your Own Rain Barrel” workshops. The timing and location of future classes are dependent on when we find a reliable source of barrels, and where they are located. Past classes have filled in a day, so it’s best to watch our website, Facebook page, or sign up on our workshop mailing list (http://www.betterground.org/about/subscribe/) to ensure you’ll be among the first to know! Comments from our rain barrel workshops Clockwise, from top left: an assortment of barrels ready to be converted; a barrel sits on a stump with spigot in place; a rust-colored rain barrel with an overflow hose, and one easy option for diverting your gutter to a barrel. Be Careful When Watering Plants Because there is some uncertainty, and few scientific studies, of what comes off of our roofs with rain water (bacteria from bird droppings, chemicals from roofing materials, particles deposited by wind, etc.), it’s important to only use your collected rain water only for non-drinking uses. If you want to make it drinkable there are treatment options, but that’s beyond this article’s scope. If you’re planning to use your collected rain water on edible plants or for livestock, it is strongly advised that you include what is called a “first flush diverter”. This is an added piece of plumbing that takes the first few (and most polluted) gallons that run off your roof and redirects that water away from your storage container. When watering edible plants, it’s best to apply water directly to the soil, not on the plants - especially not on leafy greens. A drip, furrow or trickle irrigation system works great for this, AND it will conserve water. Always thoroughly wash fruits and vegetables with fresh tap water before eating them. Question - what did you like about this class? “Being taught how they are built and then making one. The supplies and barrel were amazing for your fee. It opened up a new ‘realm’ of imagination and creativity as a home owner with conservation in mind.” “I have wanted a rain barrel but it was too expensive. The price was great for this class and the information was great. The staff were so helpful. I am so very grateful.” “I liked the opening presentation that contextualized building a rain barrel, and, also, I liked that the concepts of modification were covered so that I can customize the barrel to my needs.” “I liked that I left with the item:) Learning is great, but hands on helps me remember things.” This young gardener quickly learned how to fill her pint-sized watering can. Resources to Get You Started Visit our new web site at www.betterground.org to find a downloadable brochure providing a more detailed parts list for making a rain barrel. You will also find a list of local and online places to purchase barrels and tanks, as well as a list of local professionals who can help you set up a larger system. Our District staff is also a great resource. For more information or free technical assistance on collecting rain water, please contact: Stacy Aleksich at 425-335-5634, ext. 112, stacy@snohomishcd.org or Derek Hann at 425-335-5634 ext. 112, derek@snohomishcd.org. This father and son team are obviously proud of their efforts and were rewarded with a ready-to-go rain barrel to take home. SCD 5 The Valley Ripple Blog by Terry Johnson, Tualco http://thevalleyripple.blogspot.com From time to time, the NEXUS hosts guest writers whose topics, we feel, align with our readers’ hobbies and lifestyles. Gardening and sustainable living are hot topics and we welcome longtime Tualco resident and retired English teacher Terry Johnson’s contribution to this issue. So, grab a cup of coffee, and learn how you can turn coffee grounds into a garden amendment. Grounds for your Garden ~ Giving Back to the Soil My garden provides. I try to give back…. Here in the Tualco Valley we are blessed with a wonderful, thick layer of topsoil, thanks, I suppose, to the fact that our valley is a floodplain. Bottom land, they call it, soil that’s been deposited over time by flood action and consequent silting…a tradeoff, I guess, for the thirty days of the year we valley folk have to worry about similar silt deposits on our carpets and flood waters wicking up our drywalls. Even though I’m no agronomist, after thirty-seven years of backyard vegetable gardening, I’m well aware of what lies beneath my feet when I walk around my garden. Under a layer of dark, heavy topsoil lies a substratum of light, sandy loam, a fact that’s reaffirmed every time I dig holes to set my bean poles. At one time my garden was most certainly streambed and over time, flood action laid down the layer of loam. What is curious about this topsoil/loam combination is that it varies from one part of the garden to another. Winter Rye Winter rye, which I plant in October, works well in our valley. Planting rye is also an excellent way to control weeds in the garden. If your garden is a carpet of chickweed come spring, winter rye will solve your problem. The sections of my garden I leave as winter forage for birds are at present one mass of chickweed; the plot of rye I planted is chick- Winter rye is one way to control weeds, especially annual chickweed, the bane of NW gardeners. weed free. Grass clippings Layering the soil between vegetable rows and plants with summer lawn clippings not only serves as weed control but also adds nutrients to the soil. Grass clippings heaped in piles do not compost well, but clipped grass layered two to three inches thick between rows (I especially like to use them around my tomato plants) not only helps retain soil moisture during dry spells but also inhibits weed growth while at the same time giving back to the soil. The thin layers of clippings readily compost over the winter and are easily tilled under in the spring. (Tip: those piles of old newspapers you chuck in the recycle bin? Recycle them back to the soil instead; use those want ads and legal notices as a “floor” for those grass clippings.) Leaf mulch The east portion measures nearly fourteen inches of topsoil covering the loam; however, some thirty paces west, the topsoil is thinner with only four to six inches of the dark, heavier soil overlaying the lighter colored loam. The annual vegetable garden makes demands on the soil’s nutrients, and whenever possible, I do what I can to amend the garden plot. For thirty-seven years I’ve been trying to build the depth of that thinner topsoil layer in this stretch of garden. My Granddad Mike had a small vegetable garden in his backyard. I remember a few scrawny tomato vines from which dangled a half dozen or so anemic tomatoes. A row of beets, a few spindly fronds of carrot tops. Might have been a potato plant or two (Granddad, like most folks from the Old Country, was partial to root vegetables), but memory is a bit fuzzy on this. What I do recall, however, is Granddad’s garden always smelled like coffee. Yes, his little garden plot was also the repository for the daily coffee grounds—coffee grounds and eggshells— Granddad’s way of giving back to the soil, a guarantee of a few more pale tomatoes and golf ball-sized beets. Thanks to the folks at our local Starbucks I, too, catch the whiff of coffee in the off season whenever I pass my pepper and tomato patches. Each time I happen by the mound of dormant rhubarb, I have the urge to order a Grande Americano (just a little room, please), as well. Two of our local Starbucks take the time from their daily grind to package the shop’s daily grounds and offer them free to local gardeners. Silver bags of Starbucks coffee grounds sit ready to go into the garden as a soil amendment. Don’t bag your leaves in the fall, rake them and add them to your dahlia beds for winter protection - the worms will love you for it! The raised bed of asparagus I also layer with leaves for frost protection and winter weed control. The fact the leaf mulch leaches nutrients into the soil is evident by the vermiculture that flourishes beneath the leaves. Earthworms forage beneath the mulch, help to decompose it, supplementing and aerating the soil in the process. Composting Even patio or container gardeners can supplement their raised beds, pots, or barrel halves with composted vegetative material. We keep a compost bucket handy for degradable (non-woody) vegetable matter, and when it brims, the contents are dumped on our compost heap out back. Periodic turning of the pile accelerates the transformation of raw material into a rich compost one can spread over the garden or mound around berry canes and the trunks of fruit trees. This shifting about of compostable materials is an efficient form of recycling and precludes the use of chemical fertilizers, thus keeping your garden as organic as possible. I always look for the plump, silver bags in the “free” bins and snatch one up whenever I spy it. The sticker sealing each bag includes information helpful to the backyard gardener. The liberal rainfall in the Pacific Northwest tends to leach our soils, budging their PH toward the acidic gradient—good for the cultivation of the berries for which our valley is renowned. With coffee grounds, as the Starbuck’s label states, most of the acid is removed during the brewing process, rendering the grounds you broadcast on the garden high in nitrogen with a PH of 6.9, nearly neutral, good for the vegetable crop, less so if you have a berry patch. For those who wish their gardens to be decaffeinated or don’t have access to Starbuck’s free offerings, there are other ways to give back to your garden. Here are a few suggestions: Green Manure Plant a fall cover crop that’s turned into the soil in the spring. There are several types of crops that serve the purpose. Clovers and vetch are nitrogen-rich additives. SCD 6 When the big maple tree in our backyard sheds its fall glory, I rake up the leaves and heap them on top of the dahlia hills for frost protection. In the spring after danger of frost has passed, I rake the mulch from the dahlias, scatter it over the thin topsoil portions of the garden, and turn it under. Need a source of manure to entice worms? Find a local farmer willing to share the wealth! I live in a valley which hosts large herds of dairy cows and fortunately have access to their “by-product.” Because others don’t have that opportunity, I haven’t mentioned this other valuable resource for the backyard gardener. An old pioneer friend of mine, an avid gardener, once told me she attributed her successful gardens to her following the directives of the Farmers’ Almanac (“… root vegetables by the dark of the moon” and such). I believe, however, the fact that each spring she also tilled into her garden a truckload of “winter accretion” from a local cattle feedlot was in greater part responsible for her success as a gardener (she’d never admit to this, though). Maybe you don’t have a dairy farm for a neighbor; perhaps there’s no feedlot just over the hill, but you can still amend your garden soil. For example, if you’ve leisurely sipped a cup of coffee while reading this post, be sure to save the grounds and broadcast them on your garden. Three Local Communities Want to Be Firewise by Kristin Marshall, Habitat Restoration Specialist This year Snohomish Conservation District, with funding from WSU Extension, will work with three local neighborhoods to achieve Firewise Communities recognition. All three neighborhoods – one near Arlington, one near Darrington, and a third in Granite Falls – are located in the ‘Wildland-Urban Interface’ – the area where development meets wildland vegetation. Firewise Communities is a national recognition program for wildfire preparedness, offered by the National Fire Protection Association. It’s a program the Conservation District is using to help communities reduce their wildfire risk. Once these three neighborhoods achieve recognition, they will join 102 other Firewise sites in Washington, contributing to its status as the state with the second highest number of active Firewise Communities in the nation! Spring Firewise Actions 1. It’s time to deal with that winter debris around your home. Remove downed limbs within 30 feet of any structure, and clear any leaves, needles, and twigs within five feet of your home. This debris provides an opportunity for a wildfire to ignite your house or barn. Don’t forget areas near sheds, under decks, and in gutters (house and barn)! 2. As you plan spring planting projects, consider using fire-resistant plants around your home. A list of fire-resistant plants for Western Washington can be found at: http://www.wacdpmc.org/images/Fire-Resistant-Plants. pdf. It’s best to keep vegetation at least five to ten feet away from the foundation of any structure – this empty space will reduce the risk of burning vegetation igniting the structure. 3. This spring, keep the vegetation around your home well watered and healthy (put your rain collection system to use!). Consider replacing dead or damaged plants with healthy, fire-resistant plants. Water plants deeply to encourage root development. Adequate watering in spring and early summer will help your plants survive our dry August and September. Keeping plants around your home healthy will reduce the chance of wind blown embers igniting dry, damaged or dead vegetation. 4. As plants leaf out and grow this summer, check to make sure your address is clearly visible from the road so fire and other emergency responders can quickly and easily find you. Check on your plants throughout the summer and prune back branches as needed. Leif Fixen, District Forester, works with community members to cut fallen limbs before they are to be fed into a chipper. This community is one of three working to reduce fuel wood and prevent wildfire damage through the Firewise program. The Firewise Communities blog, called Fire Break (http://www.firewise.org/ communities/usa-recognition-program/project-ideas.aspx/ ), has more than 22 wildfire preparedness actions that can be completed at little or no cost. Check the list on the right for a few actions that can be completed in the spring. If you’d like additional advice, or a free Firewise assessment, contact Kristin Marshall at 425-335-5634 ext. 116 or kristin@snohomishcd.org. 5. Take advantage of the longer daylight and increasingly frequent nice days to complete any planning and maintenance that will help speed up evacuation. Make sure you have a plan for evacuating your animals and that the equipment and vehicles you will need for evacuation are easily accessible and in good working order. Check out the Firewise Communities blog, Fire Break, at: http://nfpa.typepad.com/Firewise/ This link has over 22 wildfire preparedness project ideas for individuals and communities that can be completed at little or no cost. Rain Gardens Can Help Horses by Alayne Blickle, Horses for Clean Water Rain gardens are a bright new idea for dealing with an old nemesis on horse properties - too much water and MUD! Rain gardens can do many things, such as: • • • • • • Reduce flooding Reduce mud and erosion Filter polluted runoff Recharge groundwater Provide wildlife habitat Provide an attractive, low-cost landscaping feature If you’re a horse person and you’ve never heard of a rain garden, stick with me here. A rain garden is simply a planted shallow depression in the ground that captures and temporarily holds rainwater from downspouts, preventing this rain from running downhill across the ground (called surface water runoff). A rain garden is like a miniature pond, but it’s planted with native plants that don’t mind getting their feet wet, and eventually the captured water soaks into the ground. On a horse property you could easily use a rain garden to re-route runoff from a paddock or barn roof. The special rain garden soil mix and native plants work together to help break down pollutants (such as too many nutrients from manure, sediment, fertilizers and pesticides). The shallow ponding of rain water also allows it to slowly percolate back into the ground, refilling underground lakes (called aquifers) and seeping horizontally into nearby streams. Rain gardens can reduce erosion, mud, and the amount of pollution reaching our creeks and streams. Plus they’re attractive and they provide important habitat for native insects, and small animals like birds and amphibians. A properly functioning rain garden doesn’t hold water for more than a day or two after the rain ends, so don’t worry about it breeding mosquitoes or creating other problems. In fact, a well-planned and maintained rain garden attracts native birds and insects that control pests. Native plants are recommended for rain gardens because these are the plants that grow in your area naturally. They have many advantages over their non-native cousins often used for landscaping. Native plants are better adapted to local climate and soil conditions, and are resistant to diseases and pests—a bonus This rain garden, next to a paddock and barn, helps capture and filter rain water before it enters ground water. for you because you won’t need pesticides, fertilizers or even extra watering to help them along once they are established. Plus, native plants provide habitat for wildlife. There are endless possibilities in choosing plants for your rain garden. Here are a few natives that would do well and be a great compliment to your yard and pasture fence line: small trees - vine maple; shrubs - red osier dogwood, indian plum, black twinberry, salmonberry, pacific ninebark; and ground cover plants - ferns, rushes and sedges. It may seem like a small thing, but together many rain gardens do make a difference. They slow the flow of surface water runoff into Puget Sound and reduce flooding in creeks and rivers. They also help stop fertilizers, oil, pesticides, manure and pet waste from polluting our rivers and harming the incredible variety of life in Puget Sound. To learn more, visit http://www.betterground.org/rain-gardens/. Contact Snohomish Conservation District staff : Stacy Aleksich at 425-335-5634 ext. 112, stacy@snohomishcd.org or Derek Hann at 425-335-5634 ext. 112, derek@snohomishcd.org SCD 7 Upcoming Events Rain Garden Tour May is ‘Puget Sound Starts Here’ Month! Celebrate all that is important to the marine ecosystem at our doorstep during ‘Puget Sound Starts Here’ month this May. Saturday, May 4: 10 – 11:30 AM Washington Oakes Retirement Center, 1717 Rockefeller Ave, Everett Register at: raingardentour.eventbrite.com Take a spring stroll in north Everett to see seven amazing and unique rain gardens in this creative effort to reduce neighborhood flooding. This will be a walking tour, with most of the time spent outside. Please dress accordingly. A brief presentation will be given at Washington Oakes (coffee and light refreshments served) prior to the tour. Puget Sound Starts Here month is filled with fun events and opportunities to raise awareness that restoring and protecting Puget Sound’s health is a priority, and that there are simple things residents can do to make it healthier. Warm Beach Dessert Social Thursday, June 13: 5:30 PM - 8 PM Warm Beach Senior Community, 20420 Marine Dr., Stanwood The Keep Port Susan Healthy group is sponsoring a free Open House at the Warm Beach Senior Community. The first speaker will be Franchesca Perez, Marine Stewardship and Shellfish Program Coordinator for the Stillaguamish Tribe Natural Resources Deptartment. She will discuss the amazing marine life in Port Susan Penny Buse, a local historian and author, will be the second speaker. Penny researched the history of Port Susan and Warm Beach extensively to write a book called Stuck in the Mud. She brings Port Susan history to life with her stories of early settlers, shipwrecks, European explorers and the early town of Birmingham. The event is free, no registration needed. Join us for Puget Sound Starts Here Night at Seattle’s Safeco Field - 6:10 PM on Saturday, May 11. The Seattle Mariners will take on the Oakland A’s. Use the special pricing code and get a FREE Seattle Mariners Puget Sound Starts Here baseball cap. Special prices include $15 view reserved seats (normally $25) and $29 field level seats (normally $40). The deadline to purchase is Friday, May 10 at 5 PM. Go to www.mariners.com/pugetsound and enter the promo code “salmon” for discount tickets. For other regional events and more information, visit www.pugetsoundstartshere.org Green Horse and Camelid Management COMING SOON: Saturday, June 15: 9 AM – 3 PM Camano Multipurpose Room, (blue buiding next to CASA) Camano Island. Register at: greenhorseandcamelid.eventbrite.com Do you own horses, llamas or alpacas? Learn ways to reduce mud and odors and other green practices like on-farm recycling, least toxic pest control, outdoor wash racks, rain barrels, and rain gardens. $10 for lunch. The new ‘Puget Sound Starts Here’ website launches in May. Soon you’ll be able to dive deep into all the reasons to love and care for Puget Sound. Barley Fodder Feeding Systems New stories will be added weekly, so it will be a great place to explore the amazing sounds, stories, places, people, and flavors of our very own and very special Puget Sound. Saturday, April 27 or May 25 10 AM – 1 PM both days If you feed your livestock hay and grain, you know how expensive it can be, especially in winter. David Capocci knows this all too well and is growing barley fodder in trays, which he feeds in mats to his alpaca, llamas, chickens and turkeys. Do you need help with your land? Snohomish Conservation District has staff and resources available to help you with soil tests, erosion control, wildlife habitat, rain gardens, drainage, and a host of other issues. Not only is it cheaper to buy seed and sprout them in grow trays, David says his animals are healthier, they have better looking coats, and they can’t wait to see him coming! Learn more about growing your own feed at one of these two classes, and check out his Alpaca Pride Farm, too! Location in box below. For the April 27 workshop, register at: http://fodderfeeding1.eventbrite.com Call the office at 425-335-5634, ext. 4 to learn more. Also, check out our new website created for people looking for information on everything from soil health to rain barrels at: For the May 25 workshop, register at: http://fodderfeeding2.eventbrite.com Permaculture on a Mountain Saturday, September 14: 10 AM - 2 PM The pioneer spirit is alive and well in Granite Falls! Come hear how David Capocci and his partners have carved out a thriving farm and guest ranch on a mountaintop outside of Granite Falls, complete with chicken tractors, yurts, and unique gardens. Learn... Paca Pride History Barley Fodder and Permaculture Principles of Permaculture workshops will be located at: Building on a Gravel Pit Paca Pride Guest Ranch Design Strategies 28311 Mountain Loop Hwy Barley Fodder Granite Falls, WA 98252 Register for Permaculture at: http://permaculturegranitefalls.eventbrite.com These sustainable agriculture and water quality classes are sponsored by Snohomish Conservation District and the Stillaguamish River Clean Water District to help residents protect water quality and encourage the sustainable use of resources. SCD 8 www.betterground.org Snohomish Conservation District Board of Supervisors Mark Craven, Chair Adam Farnham, Vice-chair Karl Hereth Steve Van Valkenburg Jeff Ellingsen Associate Members Duane Weston District Manager Monte Marti Phone 425-335-5634, ext 4 FAX 425-335-5024 Contact: Lois Ruskell lois@snohomishcd.org 425-335-5634, ext 108 Editing: Donna Gleisner The Written Edge 425-923-7110 www.snohomishcd.org The NEXUS is published quarterly and distributed free of charge to residents of the District. Funding provided by Snohomish County Surface Water Management, Washington Department of Ecology, and the Washington State Conservation Commission.