By
Norman Winter In
Nocona, Texas, which is close to where I grew up, they have
declared a water crisis, and residents can only water their
lawn and plants one day a week. Stories like that are
becoming all too common, and not just west of
here. Two
years of prolonged drought have old-timers reminiscing about
past droughts like in 1950. This also happened in the late
1970s, which led to the Denver Water Department developing
the term "xeriscape" in 1981. They
realized that during a severe drought, a $25 rise in the
monthly water bill meant an extra 25,000 gallons of water
going to the yard. That 25,000 gallons would fill an 1,800
square foot home two feet deep in water! So you can only
imagine the amount of water used when bills went up by $75
to $100. Xeriscape
means dry landscape, but many incorrectly think it to be
"zero scape." I believe the seven aspects to xeriscaping are
fundamental to good landscaping. If you are building or
buying a home and the landscape is yet to be installed, try
these xeriscaping principles. Most of
us have felt like droughts will never really effect us. We
think droughts only happen in the arid west, but I have seen
Lake Lanier in Georgia where you could almost walk across
it. A
colleague in my office recently played golf on one of the
highly acclaimed courses near Auburn, Ala. One of the water
holes that normally put fear in hackers like myself looked
like it had been hit by hail as hundreds of golf balls were
starting to show in the lake. The fact
is we are affected by drought. We're 15 inches below normal
last year and close to 12 inches now, and no major relief is
in sight. But what
about those of us who planted 57 azaleas and seven camellias
last year, and have been trying to get grass established?
The truth is water is critical to those plants' survival.
The first two years trees and shrubs are in your landscape
determines whether they get well rooted and established, and
this takes water. It is
during times like this that a good, reputable irrigation
company is worth every penny spent. Zoned irrigation systems
allow micro-jet watering or drip to shrubs, while more
conventional sprinklers are targeted to lawns. These allow
us to maximize efficiency so we don't have to water what
doesn't need it, and we can put the water directly where it
is needed most. With the
severe drought still on us, should we reconsider our
landscape design, plant selection and irrigation methods?
You bet. Released:
Sept. 11, 2000 Editor's Note: Ideal publication dates of Southern Gardening columns are within one month of their release. Editors should examine older columns carefully for any information that could be time sensitive.
Southern
Gardening
Xeriscape
Principles Apply To Gulf Coast
MSU Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
Contact: Norman Winter, (601) 857-2284
Visit: DAFVM
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