South Dakota Home Garden
South Dakota Home Garden: Water Conservation
Episode 10 | 4m 59sVideo has Closed Captions
It's important to be smart about water use. Management practices are critical.
Conservation practices are critical in dry times. Proper drainage is just as important during wet periods.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
South Dakota Home Garden is a local public television program presented by SDPB
South Dakota Home Garden
South Dakota Home Garden: Water Conservation
Episode 10 | 4m 59sVideo has Closed Captions
Conservation practices are critical in dry times. Proper drainage is just as important during wet periods.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship(bright music) - I'm Erik Helen with Landscape Garden Centers, and we're gonna talk about water conservation.
Water conservation is very, very important to all of us.
When you're doing a landscape it's very important to make sure you have water going in the right directions, and then also taking care of the water that you're allowed to use for watering your lawn, for example, or watering your garden.
The biggest thing to remember about the use of water is when you have really good soil it's really easy to conserve your water and make the best use of your water.
If your soil is very rich in organic matter, well-drained, when you water you know that you're not gonna lose any water.
The water's not gonna just drain off and go down to some creek or ditch.
When you don't have good soil then really look at those areas that are not well-drained and see how you can improve them, or create a drainage area to where the water can go, and so it's not washing away.
What we always say is when you have a nice rain, and you know that you didn't lose a drop of it because it was just such a steady rainfall, and all of it went into the ground, that is the best kind of rain, but we can never, ever count on those.
So conserving water, there's many different ways you can do that, is we'll have rain barrels which will collect the rain that's coming off of a downspout.
We'll actually create dry creek beds that's off of a landscape and we'll divert all the water to the one side that goes down the creek bed, and then it's being held in a particular, maybe it's a pond or another water feature.
Basically, they're called water collection systems.
Some of them are above ground, like a rain barrel, and some of them are below ground, and they'll be considerable sizes.
These are becoming very, very popular.
And the expense is at the beginning of it, but they're very easy to manage, because all of your water gets collected into the base, basically a cistern type system, and then pumped out at whatever period of rate or time period that you want to have it to be used again.
We'll divert water away from houses, so we don't have water in the basements.
But we'll divert the water into these drainage areas that might go into a bog garden, a rain garden, or they might just be held into a particular, we call them a pond that's just going to drain out over a period of time and slowly drain out.
When water is moving slowly, it does not erode, and that is one of the big concerns about putting all of this water into our river system is we do not want to be moving silt from one part of town at a rapid rate all the way through the city to take down to the river, because that all ends up, as we know it, farther downstream.
So, what we want to do is try to slow that rate of water down, and make sure it's not doing any damage as we do that.
So, the biggest thing about conservation is making sure that you have your own complex, your own house is very safe from water getting penetrated inside And then the other thing is making sure that your downspouts are not eroding out a big area.
So, putting splash blocks on things that will help divert the water and kind of spread the water out, and then really watching to see where the water goes after a good rain storm.
The other thing to do is when you're conserving water irrigation systems pop into mind.
Irrigation systems, typically we are running a irrigation system on a particular schedule.
Make sure that rain sensors are installed, so then that way if it is raining, the irrigation system is disconnected while it's wet, or when it has rained.
These are all required by city of Sioux Falls.
They're very, very easy to install.
It makes sense, 'cause it saves you money and also saves water.
Using a typical sprinkler head, make sure that those are set to where they're not watering a hard surface, or a hard pavement.
Designs of irrigation systems are meant to be just for the turf or the plants area.
When they're designed correctly there should be very, very little runoff, and so when you have good soil and you have a proper irrigation set up you should not have any runoff, and therefore you'll have to water less because all of your water is staying on the site.
Just some things to remember.
I'm Erik Helen with Landscape Garden Centers and keep it growing.


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