What is Sustainable Landscaping?
Sustainable landscaping is a term coined to mean sensible landscape practices that operate within the limits of the Eco-system. These landscape practices work within the limits of your local rainfall, soil conditions and sun patterns. When designed correctly, a sustainable landscape will not only be beautiful but will need a bare minimum of additional resources in the form of water and soil amendment to be vital and attractive.
About the Fact Sheets
These brief fact sheets are intended to help you get starting turning your garden space into a sustainable landscape with an increase and not a decrease in beauty. There are many resources available to you to accomplish this task. Many water agencies offer classes and workshops for guidance. The landscape industry is full of trained professionals that have both turn-key services or can guide the "do-it-yourselfer".
Your work can proceed from one section of the garden fact sheets to another as time and money will allow. In the end, a sustainable landscape will be cost effective and will save you money in reduced maintenance and materials costs. And lastly, there is the satisfaction of knowing that you have managed your little section of the environment in a manner beneficial to future generations.
A sustainable landscape is free of toxins and chemical fertilizers that have proven to be so damaging to the watershed when concentrated after rainstorms. In a word, sustainable landscaping is nothing other than doing things as closely as possible with our natural system which makes the garden self-sustaining, hence sustainable.
Typical landscapes feature large turf areas that require gas powered or electric powered equipment to maintain. Plants sold at the local nursery are often planted in inappropriate places without consideration of their sun, soil and water needs. Conventional landscaping destroys soil and plant health by employing chemical fertilizers and pesticides to solve problems. Rain and irrigation water concentrate and transport these chemicals down street gutters and into community storm drains, which carry them down stream, creating a toxic brew.
This pollution is harmful to wildlife and ultimately, ourselves. Water conservation is critical to sustainability. Water is one of our most precious resources and nationally, the average water wasted outdoors is 50%. That's right, half the water most people put on their gardens never gets to its intended target. It is lost in run-off and evaporation.