Welcome to the Coral Learning Garden. Nature is astounding. Plants, with only the water and food...

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Welcome to the Coral Learning Garden

Nature is astounding. Plants, with only the water and food that shows up;

with no tending, fertilizer, or pesticides flourish. Multiple dynamic systems support one another, balanced and beautiful. Abundance erupts across

the land with careless grace, providing habitat for plants and organisms alike.

More Sustainable Landscaping

What is it? Appropriate to your situation Healthy Soil Water used wisely Right plants in the right spots Minimize waste Nature in balance

More Sustainable Landscaping

Why do it? Improve health of garden, family and community Save money (energy, water, trash, chemicals) Protect water, soil, and wildlife Learn about the dynamic systems that are our world

More Sustainable Landscaping

How to do it... Evaluate your situation Determine what you want Learn about options Develop a plan and a schedule Start rolling it out

Evaluate your Situation

Sun, shade, slope, rainfall, cold air Current hardscape and trees Irrigation system Soil: type, drainage, test if for edibles

Time and money

Determine what you want

Appearance, as you approach, from inside, etc. Uses: Play, dining, cooking, relaxation Shade Edibles

Recap

Your plan will be more of a process You have a diagram of property and house You have current and planned hardscape and trees

identified You have identified areas to do what you want to do You have other zones determined by irrigation and

sun – edible, fruit trees, drought tolerant

Consider your options

Understand and nurture the soil Use Water Wisely Planting Plans – What to put in those zones Minimize waste Provide Habitat

Understand & Nurture the Soil

Best food for most plants is its own decaying leaves Composting – do it fast Worm Composting – do it easy Compost tea – leverage your compost Microorganisms: Provide lots of small fish

Worms Rock

Easy Clean Best product Reduce waste

Coral – day 1

Bring in the pros 8/27/08

Compost Tea Time

Add a little compost

Rototill?

Solarize 8/29

Removing lawns, preparing beds

Sod cutters Sheet mulch Solarize

Muir High Sod removal

Cover and cover...

Clear and cover w/ manure

Wet and cover

Mulch, cover edges and wait

Use Water Wisely

Plants need water to the bottom of their root zone Hydrozone: water for the plant that needs the most Understand irrigation system – avoid runoff Capture, Slow and Spread water Modify Irrigation – drip off heads or hose bibs Mulch, mulch, mulch

Plantings

The Hardest Part – you need to plan for how landscape will look in five years – mature sizes

Mediterranean zone plants go dormant in summer!!! - don't mix

Map to current irrigation zones if possible

The list of natives – and get a pro to help

Sunset Western Garden Book - Pasadena is in zone 20 Landscape Plants for California Gardens by Bob Perry

www.landdesignpublishing.com/ - get pdf's of first 3 sections Washington Park @ El Molino

Sustainable Landscape Practices that Reduce Waste

Planting to reduce heat in summer and shade air conditioner

Reducing waste and recycling materials Keeping greenwaste on site Nurturing healthy soils while reducing fertilizer

use Conserving water and topsoil Using IPM to minimize chemical use Reducing runoff

Ten tips to landscaping for wildlife

Limit the Amount of Lawn because grass offers less food and cover for most wildlife than other plants

Increase Vertical Layering between the ground and the tree canopy

Provide Water because it is essential for wildlife survival

Plant Native Vegetation whenever possible because it will attract indigenous wildlife species

Provide Bird/Bat Houses and Bird Feeders to increase the diversity of wildlife attracted to your yard

Remove Invasive Exotic Plants that take over natural habitats and can replace all the native vegetation

Manage Pets to protect wildlife and themselves. Cats are good hunters and kill millions of birds and other small animals each year.

Reduce Pesticide Use to prevent unnecessary wildlife illness, deaths, and lack of diversity

Expand the Scale of Habitat by working with your neighbors to create larger wildlife habitat patches

Key Resources

Pasadena Learning Gardens www.PasadenaLearningGardens.org

UC Integrated Pest Management system www.ipm.ucdavis.edu/

Pasadena Water and Power www.ci.pasadena.ca.us/waterandpower/ http://ww2.cityofpasadena.net/waterandpower/cooltrees/

LA County DWP sustainability siteladpw.org/epd/sg/gen_info.cfm

Great list of natives http://nativesanctuary.wordpress.com/2010/06/20/easy-natives-for-your-garden-list/

Summary