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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“As the technology costs come down, we’ll eventually have weather-measuring devices and data for each zip code, that will communicate with weather stations.” It is expensive, says Johnson, so its application is limited to larger installations.

Schultz says he installed one weather controller, manufactured by Hunter Industries, recently in new plantings, but, it is not yet operational, and he is looking forward to observing its performance. It has a weather station communicator on-site, and an automatic rain shut-off valve. Controllers provide a wonderful tool for people who have multiple properties and don’t have the time to check soil moisture, he says.  “I do have that time, and can do a better job,”  he says.

What is the Reach?
Eberhardt says they track their visitors by zip codes. According to the garden’s annual report, visitors have increased steadily from 800 in 1999-2000, to 35,000 this year. In the beginning, people from the eastern portion of the county visited the garden, but now, the largest numbers are from the city of San Diego. However, the garden is still not getting visitors from northern San Diego County, known in the area as North County. She says they are planning to export the “Bye Bye Grass” class to North County and other places.

Otay Water District surveyed its 49,000 customers in 2005 and 2006 seeking opinions and awareness of the district’s activities, including questions about the water conservation garden. Survey respondents were asked if they had every heard about the garden, and 47% says yes, while 20% had visited the garden.

Photo: Helix Water District
Courtyard in front of entrance in distance

The percentage of those who visited doubled 10 times or more, in 2005, and the mean number of visits increased from 2.9 to 3.66. More importantly, in 2006, 50% of the visitors to the garden have made changes to their landscaping as a result of what they learned on their visits, in comparison to 45% in 2005. “The most noteworthy and predominant change was the use of drought tolerant plants, and secondarily, changes in watering practices,” the survey says. Other characteristics of the visitors were that 50% were homeowners, compared to renters (19%). 

Armando Buelna, a communications officer with Otay Water District, says San Diego County, in general, uses the same amount of water today as it did in 1990. The garden is just one facet of the district’s conservation efforts. It offered vouchers for high-efficiency toilets until all old toilets had been removed. It continues the voucher program for high-efficiency clothes washers and weather-based controllers.

Looking to the Future
Eberhardt, who was director of the Tucson, AZ Botanical Garden for 12 years, before coming to San Diego and taking the job three years ago, noted that Tucson has had a real consciousness, a sense of urgency about water conservation, that San Diego does not have. And local flora is not as appreciated in San Diego as the Saguaro Cactus is in Tucson, she says.

So the kid’s classes at the water conservation garden are important in educating future water users, giving them a sense of place—showing how leaves adapt to climate and that banana leaves, for example, don’t live here. “The basis for understanding conservation is to understand nature,” she says.

Photo: Helix Water District

Native plant garden

Regarding future plans she says, “We see ourselves as being the education center for the county.” She hopes to partner with for-profit businesses to increase funding. The irrigation exhibit, which just opened, cost $58,000, and just $9,000 came from various irrigation companies. Rain Bird, in November, named the water conservation garden as its 2007 “Intelligent Use of Water Award,” and will give the garden $10,000.

A huge problem at the garden is lack of space for classes. They currently have a 30-person classroom that must also serve as a staff meeting room. They are having trouble accommodating all the classes, Eberhardt says. Fortunately, the Heritage of Americas Museum allows them to use a 70-person meeting room when necessary.

The garden has a large open-air amphitheater used for special programming, but it has no shading to protect visitors from the hot sun experienced in eastern San Diego County during the summer months. (In July 2007, there were three days with highs over 112°F.) Eberhardt says they are now raising $138,000 to add shading, and once that is done, the amphitheater can be used for classes.

The water conservation garden has been given additional acreage by the college, directly adjacent where a children’s garden will be developed. It has been delayed until the money can been raised to build it.

The water conservation garden’s 2007 annual budget is $570,000. Member agencies and private sources contribute 64%. Special events and classes contribute 8%, and net assets released from restrictions contributed 11% this year. Gift shop and plant sales contributed 4%, and in-kind services 10%. Program expenses are 78% of the budget. The five or six-person staff is supplemented by 60 volunteer docents.

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Eberhardt says that building new exhibits, or remodeling mature gardens, requires fundraising. In 2005, Friends of the Water Conservation Garden was created to increase private support.

Eberhardt is full of energy. She recognizes the challenges San Diego County faces with shrinking snowpack and diminishing water allocations. “As a culture, we want immediate change. The garden must focus on creating long-term behavior and aesthetic changes,” she says.

Author's Bio: CA-based, Lyn Corum is a technical writer, specializing in energy topics.

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