Wednesday, May 27, 2009

As It Rains on Koshkonong; Prairie Grass vs Turf

From Grow Magazine
Fall, 2007
Madeline Fisher

Rain gardens are popular, but researchers are only starting to explain what makes them effective. Soil science professor Nick Balster is testing several different rain garden plantings to see how they handle rainwater.

Since their public introduction more than ten years ago, rain gardens —small garden plots that are designed to collect and filter storm water — have created quite a storm among environmentally minded homeowners. But as their popularity has grown, so have opinions about what makes the perfect rain garden.

Many gardeners fill their plots with deep-rooted prairie plants, which they believe help water permeate the soil and replenish groundwater supplies. But some contend that turf grasses do the job just as well.

“There are a lot of stories out there, and stories are good — they provide a starting point for science,” says soil science professor Nick Balster. “But what we need are some repeated, controlled experiments that rise above bias.”

After fielding several calls from people looking for rain garden advice, Balster decided to start those experiments. With graduate students Arie Johnston MS’06 and Sara Rouse, he is growing rain garden plots blanketed by soil, shrubs and prairie plants and tracking where the water they collect winds up.

Of which vegetation should you plant? Alster’s answer so far: it depends.

Alster and his students have found that, contrary to popular belief, young, actively growing prairie gardens seem to let little rainwater past their roots.

“When people look at their prairie gardens after a rain and see no water, they tend to think all that water went through the ground and into groundwater pools,” he says. “Our trials with residential-sized gardens suggest this may not be true. What appears to be happening in our experiments is that the prairie plants can suck a substantial amount of water up and put it back into the atmosphere.”

At capacity could make prairie plants an ideal setup for trapping contaminated runoff from a parking lot,

Alster says dioxins like lead and zinc may end up staying behind in plant tissues and soil, making them easy to remove.

Turf, on the other hand, seems to act like a temporary sponge. It’s shallow, dense root mass sops up rain and releases it slowly into the soil. Balster suggests this might make it a better choice for recharging groundwater, although this idea needs testing.

But sometimes the objective is simply to capture as much water as possible, regardless of whether it ends up the earth or sky. In this case, a study by horticulture professor John Tier and graduate student Jake Schneider suggests that what matters most is sizing a rain garden properly and surrounding it with a berm.

“What we’ve found so far is that berms are the main factor controlling runoff,” says Schneider. “I think the bottom line is that if you put in a rain garden, it’s going to be incredibly effective at this, no matter what type of vegetation you have.”

Questions remain about how rain gardens perform as plants mature and what role root systems play in collecting early-spring or late-winter runoff, when plants haven’t broken the surface.

“Just like anything else in science, this has become a much more fun and interesting story than just ‘prairie versus turf,’” says Balster. Stay tuned.

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Memorial Day Remembrance





Memorial Day is the most important American holiday in the Nugent household.
We know that without Memorial Day there would be no Independence Day, no freedoms, and no America. In fact, but for the sacrifices we remember on in our Memorial Day celebration, the entire world would be a much darker place of tyranny, slavery and oppression.
Memorial Day is our day to give thanks and to remember those courageous U.S. military heroes who paid the ultimate sacrifice so that freedom's flame continues to burn bright instead of fading into a faint flicker in the hearts of civilized men. These warriors are the very tip of freedom's lance and all good people owe them dearly.
From Bunker Hill to the walls of the Alamo, from the farm fields at Gettysburg to the beaches at Normandy and Iwo Jima, from the Afghanistan mountains to every other piece of hallowed ground where Americans have fought and died in freedom's name, Old Glory still proudly dances in the wind of freedom.
In paying the ultimate sacrifice, American warriors ensured that not only would America continue to be free but that America would continue to be a beacon of freedom so intense that it no threat of oppression can extinguish it. So long as Old Glory flutters in the wind, there is hope. So long as American warriors are willing to carry Old Glory into battle, freedom's flame will never be extinguished.
Our enemies can knock sometimes down our buildings, but mortar, brick and steel does not America make. It is the irrepressible spirit and undying love of freedom that is uniquely America and it is the American warrior who is willing to fight and die to protect the God-given freedoms and rights of all people.
On this Memorial Day, I encourage each of you to spend a few moments and quietly offer a prayer of thanks to those who paid for your freedom with their lives. If you have the chance, take your children and walk quietly and reverently through a military cemetery. Stop at each white cross. Read the names carefully on the tombstones. These are the names of freedom.
Look up at Old Glory as she dances in the breeze. Surely you will agree there is no more solemn and beautiful sight than to see our sacred stars and stripes fluttering quietly in the breeze above a military cemetery.
It is our duty as parents and citizens to ensure that our children and grandchildren know that freedom is not free, that it is paid for with the blood and lives of warriors. Do not shirk this responsibility. It is one of the most important lessons you can ever impart to your children.
To quote President Reagan: "We will always remember. We will always be proud. We will always be prepared, so that we may always be free."Memorial Day is the most important American holiday.
May God eternally bless the American warrior -- the protector of freedom and liberty.

SNW - Maybe Next Weekend



NOAA

Thursday, May 21, 2009

NR 115 On Its Way Back

"We don't want to be the lawn police,"
Julie Anderson
Director of Planning and Development
Milwaukee County

Previous Posts -

HERE

HERE

HERE

HERE

and

HERE

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After records request, DNR pulls NR115 from agenda

From the Lakeland Times

..."That would certainly be in the public interest," Walker said. "This is one of the most flagrant violations of both the spirit and the letter of the open records law I have ever seen. Here we have one of the most controversial rules imaginable, with huge impacts for property owners across the state, and the DNR is not going to give the public adequate time to review it before the NRB considers it? It doesn't appear they are giving the NRB adequate time, either, since they don't have the rule yet."

Walker rejected the idea that the document was a draft.

"Ms. Thomas has confirmed that it was on a public meeting agenda, and that makes it a public document," he said. "Not only that, but Mr. Breese - the leader of this project - confirmed that the document was completed and that he has signed off on it. As such, it is no longer a draft but a formal proposal headed to the board, even if it isn't now this month."

...Because the agency has held public hearings on a draft version and is allowed to modify that draft based on public comments, it does not have to hold new hearings on the current language, and there is no guarantee the rule being forwarded to the NRB now is the same as the one the public saw in 2007.

If the Natural Resources Board approves the rule, it will take effect with the force of law unless the Legislature objects. A standing legislative rules committee can block a rule temporarily. However, for the Legislature to block the rule permanently, a bill to that effect must pass both chambers, and the governor would have to sign it into law.


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Wednesday, May 20, 2009

2009 Election

RKLD Board of Commissioners
Conducted at the annual meeting
Sat, August 1st, 2008

The RKLD Board is comprised of 5 elected commissioners and 2 appointed commissioners.

Terms of the 5 elected commissioners are staggered, and this year, just one board seat is being elected.

If you wish to be a candidate for the RKLD Board, please respond to this email. Although nominations will also be taken from the floor, by indicating your desire now will insure you have a bio printed in the annual newsletter. The annual newsletter is mailed to every parcel owner - more than 4,000 parcels.

You must be present to both run for the board, and to vote. No proxies are permitted, by WI State Statute.

Lake Up/Down 3 inches Since May 1st

Lake Level = 779.69

Inflow from Jefferson = 5,320
Outflow at Indianford = 5,830

Lake Remains Just Under Flood Stage

NOAA

Fort fishing ban repealed

Jefferson County Daily Union

...Frank Micale, president of the Rock River-Koshkonong Association, which has fought the ordinance since it came before the council, said the previous council "took the easy way out" by banning fishing along portions of the riverwalk instead of addressing the problems.

"Our group's belief is if they would have addressed the bad actors, there wouldn't have been a need for the ban at all," Micale said.

The association president asked the council to repeal the ordinance Tuesday night and go back to addressing the problems. He also offered to have the Rock River-Koshkonong Association work with the city on some of the issues.

Local fishing advocate Jim Furley agreed, noting swift action should be taken to allow anglers to take advantage of the white bass run in the Rock River downtown.

Friday, May 15, 2009

County finishes grade work at Dam

Rock County Removes Rock at Dam

Previous Posts

HERE
and
HERE


Tuesday, May 05, 2009

Safety Chain In...

...st the Indianford Bridge.

Slow No Wake remains in effect.

Lake has Crested - stay gone rain

Yesterday = 779.99 - inflow = 7330 cfs - outflow = 6320
Today = 779.95 ----- inflow = 6190 cfs - outflow = 6260

Lake Crests...Again


Disaster agency offers 2008 flood assistance

Janesville Gazette

...Call the United Way 2-1-1 at (608) 2-1-1 or (608) 246-4357.
The deadline is June 1.

Sunday, May 03, 2009

Fort television feature on this weekend

Jefferson County Daily Union

Tune in this weekend, for Fort Atkinson will be featured on "Discover Wisconsin" on television

...Highlights of the 20-minute video include the Rock River and downtown riverwalk, Lake Koshkonong, the farmer's market, Dorothy Carnes County Park, AtmosphAir Skydiving Center, the Fort Koshkonong Rendezvous, the Hoard Historical Museum and National Dairy Shrine, I Love Funky's, Nest, Soap & Pepper, Velvet Lips Lounge Bar & Grill, Catfish Alley, Central Coast Restaurant, Bethany Lynn's Tea & Treasures, Paddy Coughlin's Irish Pub and The Fireside Dinner Theatre.