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Creek-Friendly Lansdscaping
by Dave Tamayo,
Pesticide Control Program Manager,
Sacramento County Stormwater Program.
The way you design and maintain the landscaped areas of
your home or business can either help or hurt local
creeks and rivers, and the creatures that depend on
them. Landscapes have the potential to trap pollutants,
conserve water, and prevent creek erosion. However,
poorly designed and maintained landscapes can waste water,
cause soil erosion, and discharge toxic levels of
pesticides and other pollutants.
One of the biggest water quality problems in our local
area is the level of pesticides that are discharged from
the urban environment. The Sacramento Stormwater Quality
Partnership (a collaboration of the County of Sacramento
and the Cities of Citrus Heights, Elk Grove, Folsom, Galt,
Rancho Cordova, and Sacramento) and other public agencies
have found through extensive monitoring that local creeks
frequently contain the insecticides diazinon and
chlorpyrifos at levels that will kill the insects and
crustaceans that form an important part of the food chain.
Maintaining healthy plants is crucial to avoiding the use
of pesticides in the landscape. As expert gardeners know,
the best way to do that is to use a holistic approach that
includes proper plant selection, soil conditions, watering,
pruning and other maintenance chores.
Plants that are ill-adapted to the Sacramento
area, or to the specific conditions where they are planted, will fail
to thrive without heroic efforts to prop them up. Too much
shade, seasonal temperature stress, incompatiblity with
other plants, poor drainage, and other environmental factors
can all weaken a plant and make it more vulnerable to insects
and diseases. Often, the gardener is better off replacing a
problem plant, or moving it to a better location, rather than
spending lots of effort and money, and creating more
pollution in the process.
Establishing and maintaining a healthy soil
is also a key to success. Some soil additives, such as organic material,
nutrients, and trace minerals may be necessary to establish
good growing conditions. However, in many instances, over
reliance on chemical fertilizers, especially those that also
contain weed killers and insecticides, can actually harm
your soil and its ability to support healthy plants.
Pesticides should never be used unnecessarily, but
unfortunately they often are. For instance, some products are
marketed in the Sacramento area to control lawn insects, which
are very seldom the cause of the problems encountered in local
lawns. Many weed problems can be solved on a long term basis
by better plant selection, use of mulch and weed cloth, and
even lawn mowing and watering practices. Some bug "problems"
really aren't harmful to the plants at all, and don't need to
be "solved". And many less toxic, but effective pesticides are
widely available, when they are needed.
Gardeners who apply these principles often get great satisfaction
from having a better understanding of how their garden works,
as well as benefiting from healthier plants, a cleaner
environment, and reduced exposure to toxic pesticides.
The Sacramento Stormwater Quality Partnership supports and
partners with various programs to provide easy access to detailed
information and assistance:
UC Master Gardeners: (916) 875-6913
UC Davis:
www.ipm.ucdavis.edu
Nurseries and home centers:
Sacramento City's
water wise pest control program
www.ourwaterourworld.org
Landscape Professionals:
www.sacstormwater.org/cwbp/participants-l.htm
Bio Integral Resource Center:
www.birc.org
Our Water Wise site:
www.sacstormwater.org/wise
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Sacramento Urban Creeks Council 4855 Hamilton Street Sacramento, California 95841
phone (916) 454 - 4544 email: ucc@arcadecreekrecreation.com
site manager: input@sacto-ucc.org
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