How to Drought-Proof Your Home with Earthworks to Create Edible Abundance

Reader Contribution by Joshua Burman Thayer and Native Sun Gardens
Published on August 18, 2015
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A drought can last a long time.  In some areas a week, a month or more can pass without a single drop of rain.  In California, up to six months or more can pass without a rain storm.  When the storm finally does arrive, it can bring a torrent of water in very little time.  It is these stormy moments that can make or break our landscapes.  By designing our land to have rain catchment by-way-of a series of small earthworks, we can harness the rain and let that valuable moisture stay a bit longer; long enough to be utilized by our cultivated plants.  If you are wanting to drought proof your home to create edible abundance with earthworks, read on.

Rain sheets down driveways, runs down on-ramps and on downslope, eventually to the sea.  As it gains momentum, it picks up particles of topsoil and erodes fertile areas along the way.  Always finding the most efficient route downhill, water knows how to run away from our properties; that is if we don’t direct it.  By creating on-contour earthworks, called “swales” we can create temporary repositories which can fill in large storms and slowly percolate into our hill slopes at a rate that fruit trees can drink. 

Slow it, Spread it, Sink It

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