georgia rain garden manual

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This presentation was created to provide property owners with an overview of rain garden construction that can be used to reduce the nonpoint source pollution coming from their property. The design guides in this presentation represent general guidelines for rain garden construction. To be eligible for the stormwater utility credit, rain gardens must be designed according to the standards of the Georgia Stormwater Management Manual and certified by a professional engineer. As with any construction, property owners should contact Athens-Clarke County to determine permitting requirements and address any other issues that may occur.

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Georgia Rain Garden Manual

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Page 1: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

This presentation was created to provide property ownerswith an overview of rain garden construction that can beused to reduce the nonpoint source pollution coming fromtheir property.

The design guides in this presentation represent generalguidelines for rain garden construction. To be eligible forthe stormwater utility credit, rain gardens must be designedaccording to the standards of the Georgia StormwaterManagement Manual and certified by a professionalengineer.

As with any construction, property owners should contactAthens-Clarke County to determine permitting requirementsand address any other issues that may occur.

Page 2: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Build YourOwn RainGarden

Rose Mary SeymourEngineering Extension Specialist

CAES-Griffin CampusAg Pollution Prevention Program

Sponsored by P2AD of Georgia

Page 3: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

What is a RainGarden?

• An area in a man-made landscape thatcaptures a shallow amount of water andholds it for a short time period

• Runoff water is captured and infiltrated intothe soil in an indented area where plantsand soils utilize and filter the water

• An attractive addition to a landscape

Page 4: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Purpose of a Rain Garden

• Captures runoff from imperviousareas such as roofs, driveways,patios

• Reduce runoff leaving landscape tobecome stormwater

• Ponding should last no more than 48hours after rain stops

Page 5: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Benefits of Rain Gardens• Low maintenance, low water use,

beautiful landscape feature• Increases infiltration of rainwater in

landscapes with impervious surfaces– - infiltrates as much as 30 % more water

than a flat or sloped lawn area• Reduces flooding risks and stream

bed destruction downstream• Different kind of habitat in the landscape

Page 6: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Planning Your Rain Garden

• Location• Size• Plant Mix

Page 7: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Location of the Rain Garden

• At least 10 ft from a buildingfoundation

• Near patio, driveways roads• Area that water will naturally move to

–low area• Easy viewing from inside• Fitting into the rest of the landscape

Page 8: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Locations to Avoid

• Next to a building foundation• Over a septic system• Where water stands for long periods

already– High seasonal water table area

• Inside the dripline of any large trees• Slopes greater 12%

Page 9: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Rain Garden Size

• Depends on– Area of drainage– Depth of ponding of rain garden– Soil and Slope of location

Page 10: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Deciding the Size

• Figure out the size ofthe area that will haverunoff going to the raingarden

• For a house, draw afootprint

• Break whole roof intoareas going to eachgutter

• Figure areas for eachgutter

Page 11: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Soil Testing• Infiltration Test

– Dig a hole 6-8 inches deep and wide– Fill hole with water– If water does not drain out of the hole in 12

hours, not a good location for a rain garden• Soil Chemistry Test

– Take 2 cups of soil to the local countyextension agent and have a soil test

• Results will tell whether lime is needed to adjust pHand whether there is enough nutrients in the soil

• $8 fee, takes about two weeks for results

Page 12: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Problem Soils

• If soils are high in clay or have beencompacted during development, theymay not have the capacity to infiltratewell

• The rain garden area soil can beremoved and replaced with a betterdraining soil

Page 13: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Problem Soils

• Ideal rain garden soil mix – 50-60%sand, 20-30% topsoil, 20-30%compost– No more than 10% of mix should be clay

• Be careful of the nutrient content ofcomposts…lower nutrientconcentrations is better for the raingarden soil

Page 14: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Deciding the Size

• Sandy soils – 5-8% of runoff area• Clay soils – 10-15% of runoff area• Example – Area = 1800 sq.ft

– Sandy soil - .06 X 1800 = 108 sq.ft– Clay soil - .12 X 1800 = 216 sq.ft

• If the area of the rain garden needs tobe > 300 sq ft, consider making twosmaller ones or bring in the earthmoving equipment

Page 15: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Deciding the Size

A rain garden on a steeper slope canbe smaller and deeper than a raingarden on a flatter slope

Measuring Slope

Page 16: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Installing the Rain Garden

Page 17: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Layout of Rain Garden

• Rain gardens are usually not squareor a perfect circle

• The long length should beperpendicular to the major slope

• The shorter length should go downthe major slope

Page 18: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Layout of Rain Garden

• Think about where excess stormwater will go

• You cannot send your overflow ontoyour neighbors property

• Local government has jurisdiction over land disturbing activities

Page 19: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Installing the Rain Garden

• Pointers– Bottom of the rain garden should be level– Top of berm should be about the same elevation as the

uphill edge of the rain garden

Page 20: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Overflow Area

• Always have an overflow method for larger storms– Lower area in the berm somewhere– Drain pipe within rain garden

Page 21: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Connecting the Rain Garden

• Create a shallowwide swale orbury acorrugated drainpipe to carry flowfrom gutter intothe rain garden

• Line swales withturfgrass orgravel to preventerosion

Page 22: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Installing the Rain Garden

• Layout edge of rain garden withrope or garden hose

• Set aside the top 4-6 inches ofsoil (topsoil), excavate the holethen use the top soil to backfillthe planting area.

• Move the soil in the rain gardenarea down to the bottom edge ofthe rain garden

Page 23: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Installing the Rain Garden

• Prepare the soil for planting– Add lime and fertilizer as recommended

by soil test– Spread 2 to 4 inches of compost and

mix or till it into the whole area of therain garden

• Now you are ready to plant

Page 24: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Plants

• A wide variety of plants in both size textureand color makes for an interesting raingarden

• Rain gardens can be designed to attractbutterflies and birds with the right plantchoices

• Mix trees, shrubs, perennials, ornamentalgrasses and turfgrasses

• Plants must be wet and drought tolerant– Really tough plants

Page 25: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Trees for Rain Gardens

• Sweetbay Magnolia• Dahoon Holly• Winter King Hawthorn• Sugar Hackberry• Fringetree• Gingko• Persimmon• Loblolly Pine

• Red Maple• River Birch• Crape Myrtle• Black Gum• Bald Cypress• Green Ash• Willow Oak• Serviceberry• Hornbeam

Page 26: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

• River Birch

• Bald Cypress

Loblolly Pine

Page 27: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

• Red Maple

Gingko

Page 28: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

• Crape Myrtle

Sweetbay Magnolia

Page 29: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Black Gum

Page 30: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Willow Oak• Winter King

Hawthorn

Page 31: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Shrubs for Rain Gardens

• Winterberry• Arrowwood• Buttonbush• Summersweet

Clethra• Wax Myrtle• Chokeberry

• AmericanBeautyberry

• BottlebrushBuckeye

• Inkberry• Oakleaf Hydrangea• Virginia Sweetspire

Page 32: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Deciduous Shrubs• Provide Seasonal Interest

– Flowers– Berries– Fall Color

• More Natural Growth Form• Majority of Wetland Plants are

Deciduous

Page 33: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Yaupon Holly• Inkberry

Arrow wood

Page 34: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Southern Wax MyrtleBottlebrush Buckeye

Page 35: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Oakleaf Hydrangea

AmericanBeauty Berry

Page 36: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

VirginiaSweetspire

Winterberry

Spice Bush

Buttonbush

Page 37: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Herbaceous Plants for RainGardens• Asters• Blackeyed Susan• Lobelia• Northern Sea Oats• Cardinal Flower• Goldenrod• Ironweed• Joe Pye Weed• Rose or Swamp

Mallow

• Swamp Milkweed• Royal Fern• Cinnamon Fern• Netted Chain Fern• Broad Beech Fern• Canna Lilies• Yellow Flag Iris• Rushes• St. Johns Wort• Foam Flower• White Arrow Arum• Jack-in-the-Pulpit

Page 38: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Herbaceous Plants for RainGardens- Groundcovers• Shuttleworth

ginger

• Partridge berry

• Zoysia• Liriope• Mondograss

Page 39: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Canna Lilies

St. Johns Wort Ironweed

Page 40: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

SwampMilkweed

• Royal Fern

CinnamonFern

Page 41: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Asters

Blackeyed Susan

Joe Pye Weed

Liriope

Page 42: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Chasmanthium latifoliumNorthern Sea Oats

Page 43: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Miscanthus sinensisSilver Grass

Pennisetum alopecuroidesFountain Grass

Phalaris arundinaceaeRibbon Grass

Festuca cinereaSilver Fescue

Page 44: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Plants to Avoid

• Those Susceptible to Root Rots– Most coniferous shrubs– Azaleas– Indian Hawthorn– Camelias

Page 45: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Maintenance• No special maintenance required...• Routine periodic landscaping

maintenance– Weeding– Pruning– Replacing plants– Plant Division– Replacement of mulch

Page 46: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Credits

• Photos of Completed Rain Garden Examples courtesy ofCity of Maplewoodhttp://www.ci.maplewood.mn.us/index.asp?Type=B_BASIC&SEC={F2C03470-D6B5-4572-98F0-F79819643C2A}

• Plant photos from Vegetation for Bioretention Areas, AllenCaldwell, CED, NC State CES or from Todd Hurt, GCES,Cherokee County and Gary Wade, GCES, HorticultureSpecialist

• Rain Gardens A How-to Manual for Homeowners Universityof Wisconsin Extension Pub #GWQ037

http://clean-water.uwex.edu/pubs/raingarden/rgmanual.pdf• Intro Picture - Rain Gardens of West Michigan

www.raingardens.org

Page 47: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

GCES Recommended Resources• A Compilation of Low Maintenance Plants for

Georgia Landscapeshttp://pubs.caes.uga.edu/caespubs/Agriculture/horticult

ure/H-91-009.htm• Environmentally Friendly Landscape Practiceshttp://pubs.caes.uga.edu/caespubs/Agriculture/horticult

ure/H-00-060.htm• Landscape Plants for Georgiahttp://pubs.caes.uga.edu/caespubs/pubcd/B625.htm• Soil Preparation and Planting Procedures for

Ornamental Plants in the Landscapehttp://www.ces.uga.edu/pubcd/B932-w.htm• Soil Testing for Home and Gardenshttp://pubs.caes.uga.edu/caespubs/pubs/PDF/L387.pdf

Page 48: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Questions andThoughts

Page 49: Georgia Rain Garden Manual

Deciding the Size

• > 30 ft from gutter– include lawn area

between house andrain garden forsizing rain garden

• < 30 ft to gutter– only the roof area

needs to beincluded in sizing