The Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service Healthy Lawns and Healthy Waters program will host a residential rainwater harvesting and turf management training on Oct. 1 for Bandera County.

a wall of different size and type of turf and plants are used to manage rainwater runoff
Area residents are invited to attend a free workshop on rainwater harvesting and turf management training Oct. 1 in Medina. (Texas A&M AgriLife)

The free event will be held in the Medina Community Library, 13948 State Highway 16 N., from 1-5 p.m. 

Participants can RSVP at hlhw.tamu.edu/workshops or by contacting John Smith, AgriLife Extension program specialist in the Department of Soil and Crop Sciences, Bryan-College Station, at 979-204-0573 or [email protected]. Attendees who RSVP will receive updates and training materials via email.

“The Healthy Lawns and Healthy Waters program aims to improve and protect surface water quality by enhancing awareness and knowledge of best management practices for residential landscapes,” Smith said.

Residential landscape best practices on the agenda

Participants will learn about the design and installation of residential rainwater harvesting systems and appropriate turf and landscape species based on local conditions and other best practices.

“Management practices such as using irrigation delivery equipment, interpreting soil test results and understanding nutrient applications can help reduce runoff and make efficient use of applied landscape irrigation water,” Smith said.

“Proper fertilizer application and efficient water irrigation can protect and improve water quality in area creeks, and collecting rainwater for lawn and landscape needs reduces stormwater runoff,” said Dean Minchillo, Texas Water Resources Institute program specialist, Dallas.

Charley Curd, Bandera County River Authority and Groundwater District education and outreach coordinator, will also discuss the Medina River Below Diversion Lake Watershed and ongoing activities to improve and protect water quality in the watershed.

Soil testing part of program

Residents can also have their soil tested as part of the program. The training will include information on understanding soil test results and nutrient recommendations to help interpret results once the analysis is mailed to them.

Sample bags and testing are free to program participants. Residents can pick up bags, sampling instructions and the Urban and Homeowner Soil Sample Information Form in advance at the AgriLife Extension office for Bandera County, 2886 Highway N., Bandera. 

Bags containing residents’ soil samples should be returned to the location where they were obtained prior to or by one week after the training. Soil samples may also be brought to the training. Do not mail the soil sample to the lab.

Samples will be sent to the AgriLife Extension Soil, Water and Forage Testing Lab in College Station for routine analysis, including micronutrients, pH, conductivity, nitrate-nitrogen and other parameters.

Funding for the program is provided in part by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality through a Clean Water Act 319(h) grant from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

The project is managed by TWRI, a unit of Texas A&M AgriLife Research that combines expertise across the agencies of Texas A&M AgriLife.