Low-maintenance solutions for intermountain regions
Challenges Hot temperatures
Cold temperatures
Shorter growing season
Drying winds
Deluge/drought
Poor soil
April 18, 2010 Water-Saving Landscaping 2
Solutions Windbreaks
Xeriscaping
Soil amendment
Native plants
April 18, 2010 Water-Saving Landscaping 3
Windbreaks Structures
Fences
Walls
April 18, 2010 Water-Saving Landscaping 4
Windbreaks Plants
Tree lines
Hedges
April 18, 2010 Water-Saving Landscaping 5
April 18, 2010 Water-Saving Landscaping 6
Clouds
Condensation and
Precipitation
Runoff and Percolation
Evaporation
Transpiration
April 18, 2010 Water-Saving Landscaping 7
0
50
100
150
200
250
Average
Conservative
Xeriscaping Planting strategies that conserve water
April 18, 2010 Water-Saving Landscaping 8
Xeriscaping No additional watering
April 18, 2010 Water-Saving Landscaping 9
Xeriscaping Drip irrigation
April 18, 2010 Water-Saving Landscaping 10
Soil Amendment Eastern Washington loses more than
10 tons of soil per acre per year to rainfall runoff
April 18, 2010 Water-Saving Landscaping 11
Native Plants Tolerate temperature range
Tolerate drought
Prevent erosion
Support natural ecosystem
Attract pollinators
Need little or no maintenance
Sustainable
April 18, 2010 Water-Saving Landscaping 12
Temperature RangeSeasonal Temperatures
Winter Spring Summer Fall
Minimum 18 41 73 43
Average 29 57 89 54
Maximum 40 72 105 65
April 18, 2010 Water-Saving Landscaping 13
April 18, 2010 Water-Saving Landscaping 14
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
Minimum Average Maximum
Winter
Spring
Summer
Fall
April 18, 2010 Water-Saving Landscaping 15
Photos courtesy of Rugged Country Plants
Top Related