Home Virginia Cooperative Extension offers new stormwater management publication series
News

Virginia Cooperative Extension offers new stormwater management publication series

Contributors

virginia cooperative extensionResidents in Virginia and the Carolinas have experienced their fair share of rainfall over the past few months, most recently with the arrival of hurricanes Florence and Michael. In many cases, the ground was already saturated, leaving no place for the rain to go causing home and property damage.

In a new publication series, “Stormwater Management for Homeowners,” Virginia Cooperative Extension provides information on how homeowners can use different practices in their landscapes to manage stormwater and protect their property from damage in the future.

“The main goal of this six-part series is to motivate homeowners and help them manage stormwater more effectively whenever rainstorms occur,” said Laurie Fox, a horticulture research associate at Virginia Tech. Fox and her colleagues address various practices commonly used in residential landscapes such as rooftop redirection, rain barrels, permeable pavement, grass swales, rain gardens, and buffers.

Fox, who works at the Hampton Roads Agricultural Research and Extension Center in Virginia Beach, encourages home and property owners to remember what they do makes a difference. “It doesn’t have to be expensive or labor or maintenance intensive,” she said.

For most properties, the biggest sources of rainfall hit roofs and driveways, said Fox. If stormwater stays in the landscape, it can soak into the ground, be used by plants, or evaporate into the atmosphere. If rainwater is collected in a rain barrel, the water can be used later for activities like watering plants, washing cars, and filling fish ponds. If the stormwater is not funneled into the storm drain with all the other stormwater running off streets, parking lots, and other properties, the total volume will be reduced, which helps reduce flooding and pollution in the Chesapeake Bay.

Fox hopes that people can learn from this useful series. “No matter what you do, how big or small, to manage stormwater in your landscape, collectively it makes a positive impact on the community.”

The goal is to slow stormwater down and spread it out into the landscape or collect it for later use as close to the source as possible.

The publication series is free and may be downloaded from the Virginia Cooperative Extension Publications and Resources website.

For additional information on numerous other topics, visit Virginia Cooperative Extension or contact your local VCE office. Virginia Cooperative Extension is an educational outreach program of Virginia’s land-grant universities: Virginia Tech and Virginia State University, and a part of the National Institute for Food and Agriculture, an agency of the United States Department of Agriculture.

Support AFP




Contributors

Contributors

Have a guest column, letter to the editor, story idea or a news tip? Email editor Chris Graham at [email protected]. Subscribe to AFP podcasts on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPandora and YouTube.

Latest News

Local

Rockingham County: New signal in place at Route 340-Route 649 intersection

earth
Politics, U.S. & World

Alon Ben-Meir: The global epidemic of violence in an age of impunity

Global violence today is metastasizing, not contained; over 180,000 violent events reported globally by the International Institute for Strategic Studies signal a world in which conflict has become a baseline condition rather than an exception.

healthcare
Issues, U.S. & World

Virginia Tech scientist addresses what we need to know about hantavirus outbreak

Donald Trump, saying he has been briefed on the recent outbreak of the Andes hantavirus on a Dutch cruise ship, is trying to downplay any concerns about possible disease spread, telling reporters that the situation is “under control.”

interstate 81 route 11 exit 251 harrisonburg
Politics

Rockingham County: Work to begin on mile-long sidewalk on Route 11

john paone uva baseball
Baseball

UVA Baseball: Paone stellar for ‘Hoos in 2-1 pitchers’ duel win over Cal

ryan odom uva basketball
Basketball

UVA Basketball: Odom gets commitment from 7’1” prep center Favour Ibe

aew darby allin
Etc.

Another week of viewer decline for AEW with Darby Allin as champ