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Siloam Springs Rain Garden Design Workshop

  • Illinois River Watershed Partnership 221 South Main Street Cave Springs, AR, 72718 United States (map)

This event will fill up quick! Register Now.

The entire family is invited to join the Illinois River Watershed Partnership, Grand River Dam Authority, the City of Siloam Springs, and Ivory Bill Brewing for this educational workshop that will enable you to start your rain garden or bioswale project. Be one of the first 25 households in Siloam Springs to register and take a free rain barrel home ($70+ value).

Please Register below. Email contact@irwp.org if you have any questions. We will confirm your spot by email the week prior to the event. Check out the Facebook Event in the meantime.

AGENDA will be posted here when ready!

You may not think that your lawn has much of an impact on the world beyond your block, but it does! We have been trained over generations to appreciate lawns and open space as that are uniform with grass freshly cut short and free of ruffage. Let‘s rethink our vision of a perfect lawn and learn how to incorporate stormwater into our landscaping to improve water quality, help our neighbors downstream, and create beautiful spaces that connect us with our natural heritage.

“Each week we mow 45 million acres of lawns, an area larger than Florida. Two million more acres of lawns are added each year. Over the growing season, 800 million gallons of gasoline are used. We use 25,000 gallons of water per lawn to keep it green, half of our household water consumption. Lawns are our biggest irrigated crop but we cannot eat it or sell it.“ (AR.Audubon.org)

One of the primary reasons we need more use of rain gardens, rain barrels, managed natural areas, no mow zones, and other residential stormwater solutions is due to the rapid streambank erosion we are experiencing in the Illinois River Watershed. Our engineered hardscapes are very efficient at moving stormwater away from our properties at a high volume, velocity and with contaminants eventually arriving at our natural stormwater infrastructure - swales, streams, creeks, and rivers that are used for recreation and drinking water. This natural infrastructure is not equipped to handle the consequences of even small rains falling on today’s engineered landscapes. Streambank erosion is “death by 1,000 cuts” as it shears away soil, erodes banks resulting in tree falls, and loss of what we call riparian vegetation. The riparian area is the area of land adjacent to the stream; it is an important and often vulnerable area, hosting a multitude of habitats and shading the water to prevent pathogen breeding and harmful algae blooms. One other reason we need to integrate native plants and rain gardens into our landscapes is that deep root systems absorb stormwater and treat pollution from fertilization, pesticide and herbicide application, industrial contaminants, pet waste, and most everything to keep them from going downstream. This process is called phytoremediation.





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Septic Remediation Pilot Programs in Priority Watersheds - Webinar

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May 11

Rain Garden Installation