Planting A Rain Garden

Grow a Low Maintenance Garden With Deep Rooted Plants

© Christine Eirschele

Planting a rain garden is a great family project. Choose from a list of deep rooted plants that can attract butterflies or birds and becomes a low maintenance garden.

Planting a rain garden is one gardener’s way to positively impact the soil and water quality in the local neighborhood. With all the colorful plant choices and ornaments that can be put into a rain garden, it is an easy family project that will quickly become a low maintenance garden.

Low Maintenance Garden Idea

If a gardener is looking for a low maintenance garden, a rain garden should be on the list of considerations. After planting and initially watering in new plants, a rain garden should require very little watering by the gardener. A basic premise of a rain garden is to use the water that drains into the garden naturally.

Rain gardens are located in low-lying plots of land. The goal is to direct, then collect, rain or snow melt which runs off from high places such as streets, gutters or berms. When the water meanders through the soil and finally into ground water it can bring with it residue such as gasoline and oil, traces of heavy metals, pet waste, fertilizers, and insecticides. Rain gardens use deep-rooted plants that will naturally filter and soak up the collected water.

Deep-Rooted Plants

Deep-rooted plants, such as native plants in the local area, are the best selections for rain gardens. The light conditions of the area for rain garden will guide plant choices, too. A gardener’s plant list might include aster novae angliae, lobelia-cardinal flower, joe-pye weed, great blue lobelia, mertensia virginica, blue or yellow flag or Japanese iris, wild geranium, ostrich fern, viburnum arrowwood, re-osier dogwood, sedges or spiderwort. The river birch, which never seems to be properly located to get enough water, would be an excellent tree for this situation. The edge of the garden can be used for plants preferring a moist but faster draining area.

These gardens can be made into bird or butterfly oases when appropriate plants and feeders are added. A pathway made through the rain garden will add visual interest and a useful walkway for human traffic when the bed is dry.

10,00 Rain Gardens Initiative

A gardener can learn much from looking at landscape plans developing rain gardens with greater purposes. The 10,000 Rain Gardens Initiative, a public initiative in Kansas City, Missouri, started in 1995, is one example. The project’s goal is to create 10,000 rain gardens in the city. The city anticipates this project will reduce the amount of water entering their storm water sewer system. This will help conserve clean water for local communities and reduce residue entering ground water.


The copyright of the article Planting A Rain Garden in Garden Styles is owned by Christine Eirschele. Permission to republish Planting A Rain Garden must be granted by the author in writing.




Post this Article to facebook Add this Article to del.icio.us! Digg this Article furl this Article Add this Article to Reddit Add this Article to Technorati Add this Article to Newsvine Add this Article to Windows Live Add this Article to Yahoo Add this Article to StumbleUpon Add this Article to BlinkLists Add this Article to Spurl Add this Article to Google Add this Article to Ask Add this Article to Squidoo