Friday, July 8, 2011

Gardening in July

Friday, July 7

Last night with dinner, we had a bowl of fresh cherry tomatoes from the garden. Also a Walla Walla sweet onion, a Dutch purple onion, and sprigs of dill in marinated beet salad that Kate made with her own red wine vinegar. And this morning, I harvested another meal's worth of broccoli shoots, another picking of snow peas, and two quarts of black raspberries. But it's not just the bounty that makes the difference, it's the harvesting too, as I discovered again this morning, back in the corner of the lot, behind the larch tree, picking the raspberries. The cool air, the little fruit clusters, red, purple, and black, the beaded surfaces of the ripe dark fruit lit by the rising sun, the thorns brushing my shirt sleeves, the slight rustle of leaves, the seclusion.


Carl H. Klaus, My Vegetable Love: A Journal of a Growing Season

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Connie Mutel Interview: Part 1

Earlier you said that “the 2008 floods can serve as our wake-up call, prompting us to take steps that will reduce future flood damage.” What steps have been taken? What remains to be done?
A Watershed Year was the impetus of about a dozen community flood forums held across the state in 2010. But thankfully we’ve gone beyond just talking. The Rebuild Iowa Office reports that some progress has been made on all 12 of its flood-mitigation legislative initiatives, which ranged from establishing support for flooded individuals to initiating regional watershed plans. Some cities have made tremendous advances. Cedar Falls is the poster child here: it passed legislation in 2009 that discourages building in the city’s 500-year floodplain, and it also has installed rain gardens, permeable pavement, and other structures that reduce runoff into the flood-prone Cedar River.

When it comes to future floods, you’ve said, “Don’t try to return to business as usual.” Yet when it’s not actually pouring rain, most people seem to be doing just that. Where can we go for information to help us make better decisions about flood prevention and control?
The Iowa Flood Center (see next question) is a tremendous asset. The Iowa Homeland Security and Emergency Management Division is another information source, and the Iowa Department of Natural Resources has people who work with communities on flood-sensitive development plans.

Tell us more about the Iowa Flood Center.
This is an exciting new center at the University of Iowa. The IFC is the nation’s first academic research and training center devoted solely to flood research. It is a unique resource for Iowans and already has a number of products available on its website. For example, anyone can access current stream-level data from the IFC’s statewide network of 50 stream sensors. The web-based “Iowa Flood Information System” allows Iowans to view maps of watersheds upstream from their communities and overlay other data on these maps, such as current precipitation, river stage data, and water travel times throughout the watershed. This is an example of a powerful new tool that will help Iowans better understand flood risk and prepare for imminent floods. I’d encourage readers to look up their community and bookmark the website (www.iowafloodcenter.org).