Learn how to make landscapes more livable and resource efficient

Cooperative Extension and GreenACTnv present free classes for renovating landscapes

Landscape

Cooperative Extension offers two free presentations on how to renovate home landscapes to make them more livable and resource efficient.

Learn how to make landscapes more livable and resource efficient

Cooperative Extension and GreenACTnv present free classes for renovating landscapes

Cooperative Extension offers two free presentations on how to renovate home landscapes to make them more livable and resource efficient.

Landscape

Cooperative Extension offers two free presentations on how to renovate home landscapes to make them more livable and resource efficient.

Property owners in western Nevada have endured several years of drought followed by summer flash flooding in some areas and heavy rainstorms this winter. Now that home landscapes are greening up, it is a good time to consider whether some renovation would be in order.

University of Nevada Cooperative Extension, in partnership with GreenACTnv, will offer two free presentations on how to renovate home landscapes to make them more livable and resource efficient. The first workshop is 6 p.m., May 3, and the second is 6 p.m., June 14. Both will be presented at the Douglas County Cooperative Extension office, 1325 Waterloo Lane in Minden. Presenters include Cooperative Extension Horticulture Specialist Heidi Kratsch, Extension Water Resource Specialist John Cobourn and Geologist Matt McMackin.

"These classes will help homeowners consider landscape features that provide benefits like increased comfort and decreased costs," said Cobourn. "For example, placing deciduous shade trees on the west side of a home can reduce air conditioning costs by up to 30 percent. But such a change requires redesign of the irrigation system." 

The May 3 workshop will address topics such as:

What changes homeowners might want to make to their landscapes

  • Planting trees to cool a yard and home in summer
  • Reducing the need for maintenance and use of irrigation water
  • How to design landscapes to incorporate certain goals, such as providing for defensible space for wildfires, growing a vegetable garden, or creating a habitat for birds and pollinators
  • Making a landscape more resilient to weather extremes, such as droughts and floods
  • What to do with areas in a landscape that are generally uninviting or attract weeds

The June 14 workshop will discuss designing and installing drainage management features for occasional heavy rainstorms to allow runoff to soak into the soil where it will replenish the groundwater supply.

For more information, contact Douglas County Extension Educator Steve Lewis at lewiss@unce.unr.edu or 775-782-9960. Persons in need of special accommodations or assistance should call at least three days prior to the workshop.

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