Showing posts with label Tips. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tips. Show all posts

Thursday, September 28, 2017

Organic lawn care: Better turf without chemicals

Photo credit: CleanWaterMN

Maintaining a healthy lawn doesn’t mean you have to douse it with chemical weed-killers and fertilizers that can cause harmful runoff. Just ask “Organic Bob” Dahm who is pioneering a natural approach to lawn care in the Twin Cities. Clean Water Minnesota recently caught up with Dahm and client-turned-business partner Melissa Berg to learn how aeration, organic compost and the right seed blend can build a resilient lawn that’s easy on the environment.Read the story at cleanwatermn.org.

Interested in trying natural lawn care for yourself? Dahm and Berg recommend
The Organic Lawn Care Manual: A Natural Low-Maintenance System for a Beautiful Lawn by Paul Tukey. You can also register for an Installing Turf Alternatives workshop on October 24, presented by Metro Blooms and Blue Thumb. 

Monday, May 1, 2017

Make Waves at WaterFest 2017!


WaterFest, a free, family festival, in its 18th year, celebrates our clean lakes and offers fun and opportunities for outdoor hands-on learning about clean water, wildlife, land and water conservation.
 
"Make Waves" at WaterFest 2017
Saturday, June 3, 11 AM - 4 PM
Lake Phalen Park in St. Paul

Ramsey-Washington Metro Watershed District invites you and the whole community to join us for a fun-filled and educational day on and around the water at our annual WaterFest celebration. Spread a blanket on the hillside, chill out, relax and gaze out at beautiful Lake Phalen while listening to great music. All this and more is possible when you attend “Make Waves” WaterFest 2017.

WaterFest is held beside beautiful Lake Phalen in St. Paul.

 
Hot off the press are T-shirts for volunteers
with this new WaterFest logo!



Invite your neighbors and friends!
Bring your kids and grandkids!
 
At WaterFest you'll be inspired to learn new things and then try what you've learned at home. Learn some fun new games and recharge your batteries by meeting others in the community who are also interested in helping to keep our water clean.
 
 


Local talent will be featured at the amphitheater.
The Center for Hmong Arts and Talent (CHAT) will be hosting a variety of acts.
Photo credit: Anita Jader



Water Conservation is a popular topic at WaterFest. Check out the EMWREP interactive display.
(EMWREP stands for East Metro Water Resources Education Program)
Photo Credit: Sage Passi
 



New this year are the Breck School Bato Bato Marimba Band and the Wisdom Water Dancers
who will perform at the amphitheater.

Photo credit: The Current
 
Back by popular demand are Voyageur canoe rides, kayaks and paddleboats.
Photo Credit: Anita Jader

Wilderness Inquiry canoe rides are always a popular activity at WaterFest.
Photo Credit: Sage Passi
 



Try out some fishing with equipment and lessons from Tips Outdoors.
Photo credit: Sage Passi


Or win a prize when you participate in the fishing contest!
Photo credit: Sage Passi


 
  
Get some exercise at the Saint Paul Parks and Recreation jump castle!
Photo Credit: Anita Jader

Have your face painted and create a one-of-a-kind work of art.
Photo Credit: Anita Jader


Try your hand at lawn games.
Photo Credit: Anita Jader
Make and decorate your own fishing lure!
Photo Credit: Anita Jader

Then refresh yourself at our Water Bar featuring flights from St. Paul, Maplewood and Roseville.
 Photo Credit: Anita Jader

  

Be sure to pick up a Passport Odyssey so you can win wonderful prizes!
Photo Credit: Sage Passi


The fabulous Farnsworth Marching Band will return this year featuring eighty-eight musicians.
Photo Credit: Anita Jader

Food and ice cream will be available to purchase from several different venders.
Photo Credit: Anita Jader




At WaterFest you can play water games that will test your knowledge of pollinators and how to reduce your water footprint, receive sustainable gardening advice from Master Gardeners, take part in St. Paul Public Library StoryWalks with water-related themes and so much more!

Please note: Due to road construction, the park will only be accessible from the northwest or southeast because a section of Wheelock Parkway is closed. The five parking lots, island lot, pavilion lot, boathouse lot and beach lot on Phalen Drive and the satellite parking lots, Phalen Rec Center and Gustavus Adolphus Church lots will all be open.

In April 2016, Ramsey-Washington Metro Watershed District received the Sustainable Saint Paul Environmental Education Award for WaterFest. It was touted as “an event for all ages, with the vision that everyone can play a role in protecting our water resources".


Volunteers are still needed! If you'd like to volunteer or be an exhibitor, CLICK HERE.

 
Volunteers are always appreciated!
Photo Credit: Anita Jader
 
Many thanks to our sponsoring partners listed below.
 


Capitol Region Watershed District




City of Maplewood



 
City of Saint Paul





City of Roseville





City of Little Canada




 
City of Shoreview





City of White Bear Lake



 
City of North Saint Paul




City of Landfall



 

Barr Engineering




 

Metropolitan Council Environmental Services


 



Minnesota Native Landscapes





Minnesota Water Well Association





Ramsey County





Galowitz-Olson PLLC






Center for Hmong Arts & Talent




 
FIN - Minnesota DNR Fishing in the Neighborhood






Fishing for Life





Joe's Sporting Goods





Ramsey Conservation District





Tips Outdoors




 
Washington Conservation District




 
Wilderness Inquiry





 

Friday, April 28, 2017

Rethinking the Traditional Lawn

By Angie Hong
(Reprinted from East Metro Water, April 26, 2017)
 
Traditional lawn interspersed with bee-friendly Dutch white clover.


 
When my dad moved to Palm Springs in 1987, the residential landscape there was eerily Midwestern. There were rows of tidy lawns in front of every house, petunias in the gardens, and pots of pansies on front porches. If it weren’t for the palm trees, one could have almost pretended they were in a town in Wisconsin or Ohio.

Palm Springs' green lawns and trees stand out against the earthen colored mountains.
 
 
It's hard to believe that people are growing lawns in a landscape that looks like this.
 
Of course, neither lawns nor petunias are well suited for the desert, and people in the Palm Springs area eventually realized that their landscape aesthetics would have to change. Over the years, when I headed south to visit my dad, I noticed that petunias had given way to desert blooms and many people had replaced their lawns with rock gardens. Landscaping in common areas began to change as well. Cities and homeowners’ associations transitioned to drought and heat tolerant xeriscaping and installed high-tech irrigation systems to reduce water usage. 

Thirty years later, some people in the Midwest are starting to wonder if traditional lawns make sense anywhere, even here in our temperate climate. According to various estimates, there are about 40 million acres of lawn in the United States, 32 million of which are irrigated. In fact, there are more irrigated acres of lawn than corn! The U.S. EPA estimates that Americans use 9 billion gallons of water per day irrigating lawns. In addition, lawns use 3 million tons of fertilizer per year, 30,000 tons of pesticides, and 800 million gallons of gasoline. 


Municipal water use during the summer spikes
dramatically due to lawn watering.
If we were to go back in time about 75 years, however, yesterday’s lawns looked a lot different than the ones we have today. Before broadleaf herbicides were invented, it was considered normal (even desirable) to have a lawn full of clover. Most families didn’t waste water on lawns, and if they did water the grass, it was only once or twice during the hottest weeks of the summer. Today, even here in Minnesota, we are beginning to feel the strain of excessive water use. We see lake levels dropping during extended periods of drought, and cities building expensive new well fields to meet summer water demands.

 

As we begin to rethink the “traditional” lawn, some people are advocating for a return to simpler ways when lawns were lower maintenance. Locally, the Pollinator Friendly Alliance has worked with the University of Minnesota to create a bee-friendly lawn mix that is low-growing and provides nectar for honeybees and native bees. To over-seed an existing lawn, scalp the grass to within 1 inch, rough up the soil with a rake, and then seed with a mix of 4lbs fine fescue, 7 Tbs white Dutch clover, 2 Tbs creeping thyme, and 7.5 Tbs self heal per 1000 square feet of lawn. Water for the first two weeks until the seeds germinate. After that, a bee-friendly lawn will not need water or fertilizer and only occasional mowing to keep it at a height of 3-4 inches.


A bee lawn includes a mix of low-growing fine fescue grasses, self heal, creeping thyme and Dutch clover.
Photo from Pollinator Friendly Alliance

Low-mow is another option that works for sunny or partially shady lawns. Comprised of fescue grasses that only need to be mowed once or twice a year when they go to seed, low-mow lawns don’t need to be watered or fertilized and will naturally block most weeds. Prairie Nursery in Wisconsin (
www.prairienursery.com) is the most popular place to purchase low-mow seed mixes, although low-mow is also sold locally at Gertens and Minnesota Native Landscapes. To establish a low mow lawn, kill off your existing grass in late August and then seed in the low-mow mix around Labor Day.  

Low mow grass only needs to be cut once or twice a year.
Photo by Douglas Owens-Pike

Even if you’re not ready to make a transition to a bee-friendly or low-mow lawn, there are a few simple changes you can make to save yourself time and protect water resources. First, resist the urge to apply avoid fertilizer in the spring. Fertilizer makes the grass grow faster (forcing you to mow more often) and tends to promote blade growth instead of root growth, making the grass less tolerant to drought during the summer. Set your mower blade higher (3-4in. tall) to encourage deeper roots, and mow less frequently or not at all during dry spells in the summer.

If you want to apply fertilizer, Minnesota Extension recommends one application around Labor Day. Get your soil tested first to ensure that you don’t waste money or give your lawn the wrong nutrients (
http://soiltest.cfans.umn.edu). Most Minnesota lawns can survive without irrigation, but if you have an automatic system, install a rain sensor or soil moisture sensor and program your irrigation system to deliver no more than one inch (1in.) of water per week. On weeks that it rains, the lawn might not need to be watered at all. For more tips, download What to ask for from your lawn care provider or the Blue Thumb Year Round Guide to Yard Care at www.mnwcd.org/lawn-care.

Interested in learning more about lawn alternatives and water-friendly gardening? Stay tuned for a tour to be announced this summer.



Angie Hong is an educator for East Metro Water Resources Education Program - www.mnwcd.org/emwrep - which includes Brown’s Creek, Carnelian Marine - St. Croix, Comfort Lake – Forest Lake, Middle St. Croix, Ramsey Washington-Metro, Rice Creek, South Washington and Valley Branch Watersheds, Cottage Grove, Dellwood, Forest Lake, Grant, Hugo, Lake Elmo, Newport, Oak Park Heights, Oakdale, Stillwater, St. Paul Park, West Lakeland, Willernie and Woodbury, Washington County and the Washington Conservation District. Contact her at 651-330-8220 x.35 or angie.hong@mnwcd.org