March 2008

A Waterwise Future

San Diego County’s Water Conservation Garden has a serious mission: to educate county residents about the looming water crisis and to change cultural attitudes about landscaping.

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By Lyn Corum

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Then, there are the education classes offered both on weeknights and Saturdays. A new class is entitled, “Bye Bye Grass.” In two parts, of two hours each, the first part shows homeowners how to exterminate their lawns for good. The second part focuses on designing a new landscape and evaluating the irrigation system.

There are classes on: the seven principles of xeriscape; gardening for sustainability; designing landscapes with native plants or cacti and succulents; classes on using mulch, compost, and fertilizer; what to plant on a hillside; irrigation design for waterwise gardens; and managing irrigation water.

Guided tours of the gardens are led every weekend by some of the 60 garden docents, and they listen to the questions people ask and want answers for. The classes grow out of these questions. For example, the question, “I want to get rid of my grass. What do I do?” led to the creation of “Bye, Bye Grass.”

Photo: Helix Water District
Fire-wise landscape exhibit

Three festivals are held each year. The Spring Garden Festival, cosponsored by Cuyamaca College, and Heritage of the Americas Museum, both immediately next door, and the Water Conservation Garden, attracted 6,000 visitors in 2007. Cuyamaca College’s horticulture department sells waterwise plants, and landscape designers and architects offer free 20-minute demonstrations. Fun stuff is provided for kids, as well says Eberhardt. Two other yearly festivals attract around 2,000 visitors at each. Cuyamaca College’s horticulture department uses the garden as a teaching tool, regularly bringing classes to the garden, Eberhardt says.

Quarterly newsletters are full of advice, programs, and announcements of annual festivals. Handouts promoting drought tolerant plants—such as “Nifty 50 plants for California Friendly Landscapes”—can be found at local nurseries that have reported a boost in business as a result of the brochure. Another handout available at the exhibit describes sprinkler system design capacity, and explains how to design the correctly sized sprinkler system.

One of the most innovative exhibits in the garden is the miniature house and landscaping, designed, with the advice of a local fire protection district, to reduce a home’s vulnerability to wildfires. For example, it defines a defensible buffer needed to provide a minimum of 100-foot-clearance around structures. A handout listing fire-resistive plants located throughout the garden accompanies the display. The plants significantly improve the survivability of a home when a wildfire threatens.

Photo: Helix Water District
Newly replanted cactus and succulent garden

But, as Eberhardt says, everything burns if the fire is hot enough. The October 2007 fires in San Diego County were proof. Looking across the main thoroughfare outside the garden, one could see the brown hills. A market down the street was burned, and employees at the garden were evacuated. It was a scary time, but the fire did not come to the garden. A fire department representative told Eberhardt that the winds were so hot, that everything he has known about fires for the last 30 years is now thrown out the window.

While the emphasis has been on educating homeowners, new education tools have or are being designed for professional landscapers and homeowners associations. Don Schultz, horticulture manager at the garden, in addition to teaching homeowners the basics of irrigation, also leads classes for commercial landscape managers. 

Schultz says he teaches homeowners very basic stuff, like what a sprinkler looks like and how to hook it up.  But the workshop for professionals is designed for people who manage several properties and who don’t have time to go onsite regularly. For example, he teaches how to determine a water budget and to do a cost analysis. There is software they can use to track and audit water usage for 40 or 50 properties.

Photo: Helix Water District
Close-up of grevillea, one of the "Nifty 50" plants for California

Schultz says a landscaper will tell his or her client a repair or upgrade will cost X amount of dollars, and the client will question why it is necessary.  Schultz’s information will give them the quantitative tools to say, “you will save $10,000 in water costs if you do this.” He also shows them how to write reports with concise summaries for their clients.

Schultz is designing a class for homeowner associations, scheduled to start in January. His intent is to get a property manager, contractor, and HOA Board member to come as a team to learn about water use monitoring, how to create a water budget, and do a cost analysis. He will talk about the roles each of the team members can play in the maintenance of the HOA’s landscape.

Schultz says there are often deficiencies in irrigation that produce dry spots in a particular landscaped area. The contractor’s goal is to see all green and no dry spots, but that may not be cost effective. The team must be committed to available resources, so that, when they see dry spots together they can make a decision about investing in changes, rather than the HOA members sitting in the background criticizing the landscape contractor.

The History of the Garden
How did this southern California gem happen? It took years of work for a small number of dedicated horticulture experts and utility water conservation specialists, to persuade water engineers of the value of a water conservation garden.

Photo: Helix Water District
Close-up in bird and butterfly garden

California urban water management and conservation came alive starting in 1990, during those drought years. The Metropolitan Water District, that provides water to most of southern California, was cutting water allocations. The California Urban Water Conservation Council was formed in 1991, and nearly 100 urban water agencies and environmental groups signed a memorandum of understanding, pledging to develop and implement comprehensive conservation best management practices. Today, there are 384 members.

In 1991, in a beautiful southeastern corner of California, east of San Diego, several regional groups concerned about the drought, then, in its sixth year along with MWD’s cutbacks to water districts, formed a task force with Otay Water District as lead agency, to propose creating a water conservation garden. The intent was to create a teaching garden to educate the area’s future water users how to have colorful green landscaping without thirsty green lawns.

Both Otay Water District and Helix Water District were facing 30% cuts in water allocations from the MWD at the time, and they knew that 50 to 70% of all water is used outdoors.

Jan Tubiolo, now retired, was water conservation coordinator for Otay, and she and Helix board member Warren Buckner spearheaded the drive to create the garden. A succulent garden within the larger garden, designed by his son, is named in Buckner’s honor, in recognition of his devotion to succulents.

Tubiolo recalled that her board sometimes says yes and sometimes says no, to investing in the garden. She attributed the vacillation to “government conservatism.” Furthermore, the area was in an economic downturn in the early 1990s and the landscape industry was suffering—nurseries were going out of business. 

Gerry Kiffe, a former landscape designer and general manager of GardenSoft, which creates presentation software for the landscape industry, explained why water engineers were so reluctant to embrace the idea of a water conservation garden—they had no concept of marketing water conservation. Instead, they wanted to quantify how much water a water conservation garden would save. It’s almost impossible to measure, he says, in explaining why it took six years to get the garden up and running. 

A joint powers authority was established in August 1992, and Jon Powell was hired to design and present a preliminary budget for the Water Conservation Garden. Funds totaling $700,000 were raised over the next two years from the landscape industry, including nurseries and irrigation suppliers. But still, the bulk of the $2.3 million to build the garden had to come from Otay and the Helix Water District that had joined the JPA by 1995.

The preliminary budget indicated that Otay’s investment would cost each of its ratepayers 47 cents per year, for 20 years. The far greater number of Helix ratepayers would pay 35 cents per year. That was what convinced the boards of both water districts, to finance the water conservation garden in 1996, says Tubiolo. Next Page >

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