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May, 4, 2008

HOME & GARDEN

Bellingham gardener designed landscape with Lake Whatcom in mind

ZOE FRALEY


BELLINGHAM -- Myron Wlaznak is particular about the water that makes its way onto his property. Once it's on his land, he makes sure it goes through quite the obstacle course before it gets out.

"We're taking the water that runs, stopping it here, giving it a chance to clean itself and then letting it go," says Wlaznak, 59, a retired writer and avid landscaper who lives with his wife, Paula, in Bellingham.

As a resident of the watershed area above Lake Whatcom, he sees it as a duty and a pleasure to manage the stormwater that flows through his property, minimizing the presence of nutrients such as phosphorus that are harmful to the lake.

"This is a fun thing to do; it's a fun project," he says of the yard he's been building up for nearly 15 years. "I designed it with the watershed in mind. I just did some things that made common sense to me."

What made the most sense to Wlaznak was to arrange his yard so it would act like a sponge for the stormwater that flows through his downhill-sloping property.

At the top of the hill in his backyard, Wlaznak has planted drought-resistant species that soak up water when they can, and he's put in drain tile, which is basically a tube to help move and distribute stormwater through the yard and into the stormwater control basin in the front of his yard. His front yard and the beds beside his driveway have French drains underneath, which filter the water through gravel.

"Stormwater is a tough, tough thing to deal with," he says. "What you want to do is treat it in the most natural way you can. That's the most effective way. It's a tough problem, it really is, but it's everybody's problem."

To address his stormwater, Wlaznak made his stormwater control basin by adding sand, weed fabric and river rock to a hole at the bottom of his front yard. This basin and the thirsty-rooted trees around it helps draw phosphorus out of the water and slow down its flow downhill into Lake Whatcom.

"Everybody contributes to the deterioration of Lake Whatcom," he says. "What we want to do is limit that contribution to the maximum that we can. It's a frame of mind."


Reach Zoe Fraley at zoe.fraley@bellinghamherald.com or call 756-2803.