Showing posts with label rainwater. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rainwater. Show all posts

30 Dec 2022

Learning About River Mapping

 Did you ever wonder what path a raindrop takes when it falls past your window? Will it reach the ocean? WHICH ocean? I asked that question when we were living on a farm north of Edmonton in Alberta, and investigated with maps and online maps. Turns out, the stream on our farm trickles into a little river called Redwater, which runs into the North Saskatchewan River, out of Alberta, and many many kilometres of rivers and lakes later reaches Hudson Bay via the Nelson River. 

But that journey is not the path taken for ALL the water draining from land around that Alberta farm. About two miles north of the farm is Fairytale Creek. As my friend Billie Milholland confirmed during her mapping project, that creek is part of the watershed for Athabasca River. Many kilometres of rivers and lakes bring that water to the Mackenzie River and the Arctic Ocean. 


Billie's project led to the publication of Living In The Shed, about Alberta's North Saskatchewan River watershed. This is a fascinating book, not only for people living along that waterway, but for people wanting to know more about the natural world where they live. There are many photos and maps which make this book a tremendous resource for learning about rivers and recent history. Here is a link to read more about Billie's book https://www.nswa.ab.ca/resource/living-in-the-shed/ **which includes a link to look at a digital version of her book online!**  And here's another link to read a web page about her other writing https://billiemilholland.ca/

Not everyone is so lucky to have a friend who has mapped the local watershed so thoroughly, but there are many open source projects and datasets for people wanting to learn more about river knowledge. Public libraries and university libraries might have access to paper maps and computerized electronic maps, and online resources. Kayaking and canoeing groups can offer practical knowledge as well as the best maps for paddling and hiking adventures.

Here's a link to River Runner, a terrific website by Sam Learner and his team. Their project is still in beta, which means that though there are improvements to make, a person can have a lot of fun with it already. Check it out at https://river-runner-global.samlearner.com/ and see where a raindrop that falls anywhere on Earth might end up! They have over 20 interesting routes listed at this page.

If you're looking for more details about River Runner, such as the software behind this project, you can go to this link: https://ksonda.github.io/global-river-runner/ 

Good luck learning about your own watershed or interesting places around the world! Water resources are vital for humans and for the natural world.

5 Nov 2021

Soaking Up Storms

 by Megan Clendenan

Where I live, in the Pacific Northwest, autumn means rain and plenty of it. The rain pours down and flies sideways, soaking your cuffs and everything else if you’ve forgotten an umbrella.


If you’re out walking during a storm in a city, you might notice rainwater soaking the streets, skidding across parking lots and sidewalks and then pouring into drains – if they aren’t clogged by soggy leaves or other debris. All that storm water draining into the sewer mixes with oils, heavy metals, pesticides and other pollutants that are on our roadways. In cities, where impermeable surfaces such as concrete sidewalks, roads and parking lots are common, a significant portion of rainfall ends up in the sewer system alongside whatever chemicals it has picked up along the way. Then, depending on the city’s location, it runs into nearby waterways, lakes or oceans.
 

With rising global temperatures and changing weather patterns, more than 50% of the world’s population now reside in cities, on the front line of climate change. How can cities cope? One strategy is to learn from nature, and adapt urban buildings, infrastructure, and surfaces to work with the surrounding ecosystem.
 

Take Seattle, Washington, a city with significant annual rainfall. In 2017, a nonprofit group called Urban Greenprint teamed up with engineers, biologists, and city planners to study how they could design buildings and infrastructure to help mimic the evaporation rate of the Pacific Northwest forest to help reduce flooding as well as reduce polluted runoff from washing into the nearby Pacific Ocean.

 

Can you count all the layers? Photo by Megan Clendenan

The forest consists of thousands of layers, which work together to slow the rain and retain moisture before it reaches the ground. Moss and tree bark can hold water like a sponge. Douglas fir trees, common to the area, have needles that spear raindrops, breaking them into smaller parts, increasing the amount of evaporation and decreasing soil erosion.
 

With thoughtful design, urban buildings and other infrastructure can mimic layers found in the forest. Living walls can slow rainfall as it moves from the roof, through the textured green wall, absorbing moisture during each stage of the process. Canopies, awnings, screens and wire sculptures can mimic the ability of pine needles to split raindrops and increase evaporation. Green rooftops and ‘rain gardens’ planted next to sidewalks can soak up water like sponges.


A rain garden next to a sidewalk also shields pedestrians
from the cars. Photo by Megan Clendenan

So next time I’m out during a big rainfall, I’m going to keep my eyes open for places where my city is soaking up the storm – and where adaptations could be made.

Design Concepts Learned from Pacific Northwest Forests, Urban Greenprint, Seattle
https://issuu.com/urbangreenprint/docs/urban_greenprint_seedkit_v1
https://www.asla.org/climatemitigation.aspx
https://www.nrdc.org/stories/green-infrastructure-how-manage-water-sustainable-way