Rain Garden Connection Is Completed

I got an email from one of the Water Resources people who helps with the Master Rain Gardener program for the county saying that there were free rocks available to us. Yay!

I was planning to sift more rocks out of my yard in the spring to finish up the southeastern trench connector, and not looking forward to it. This was an offer I could not pass up. I picked up a couple of hundred pounds yesterday and put them in place as soon as I got home.

Photo of plastic- and rock-lined trench leading from downspout to the rain garden.
The southeast downspout connector is finally completed. The rocks are now level with the soil on both sides and the plastic is completely covered. The nearly black plants are Eupatorium rugosum. Photographed November 11, 2017.

It’s a trench rather than a buried pipe connector because of all the roots. I am delighted to have the plastic finally out of sight.

Photo of downspout sticking out at an angle from the building.
Adding rocks where the soil gets splashed and washed around is a low-cost solution to a nuisance downspout. Photographed on November 11, 2017.

There is one other spot in the yard with downspout woes—on the north side of the house. Somehow, reconfiguring that downspout never occurred to us when we added on the kitchen  some decades ago [to the right in the photograph]. The downspout stuck out so far that I took the final section off. That section is on the ground next to the house in the back, and serves as a reliable chipmunk condo.

The remaining downspout is only trouble when it pours. I put one of those plastic splash guards under it years ago, which helps, but now I’ve added rocks where the soil would be splattered and washed away. Handily enough, this leads right into the pawpaw bed. The pawpaws get standing water under them less than once a year from this downspout, and rocks should mitigate the washouts. I hope.