Rain Garden Installation for Iowa Properties
A rain garden is one of those landscape features that does two jobs at once. It manages stormwater runoff and looks good doing it. The concept is simple: instead of letting rain run off your roof, driveway, and lawn into the street or your neighbor yard, you direct that water into a shallow, planted depression where it can soak into the ground naturally. The plants and soil filter out pollutants, the water recharges the groundwater instead of running off, and you get a garden that changes with the seasons. In the Cedar Valley, where heavy spring rains are a fact of life, rain gardens make a real difference in how water moves through your property.
Location is the first thing to get right. You want the rain garden to sit where it naturally receives runoff from downspouts, driveway surfaces, or lawn areas. At the same time, it needs to be at least 10 feet from your foundation to keep water away from the basement. Look for a low spot in your yard where water already tends to collect, or position it to intercept runoff before it reaches a problem area. The garden should be dug as a shallow depression, typically 6 to 12 inches deep, with a flat bottom and gently sloping sides. The size depends on how much roof and yard area drains into it. A good rule of thumb is that the garden should be about 20 to 30 percent of the area that drains into it.
Soil preparation is what makes a rain garden work. The native clay soil in most Cedar Falls yards does not drain fast enough to handle the volume of water a rain garden receives. You need to amend the soil with compost and sand to create a mix that absorbs water quickly. We typically remove the existing soil to the depth of the depression, mix it with compost and coarse sand, and put it back. The amended soil should drain at a rate of about half an inch per hour. You can test this by digging a hole, filling it with water, and timing how long it takes to empty. If it takes more than 24 hours, your soil needs more amendment.
Plant selection is the fun part, and it is also critical to how the garden performs. Rain gardens need plants that can handle both wet and dry conditions. During a storm, the garden fills with water and the plants are sitting in saturated soil for a day or two. Between storms, the garden dries out, sometimes for weeks at a time in summer. Native Iowa plants are ideal because they evolved with exactly those conditions. Swamp milkweed produces pink flower clusters that attract monarch butterflies. Blue flag iris has striking purple-blue flowers and thrives in wet soil. Turtlehead blooms in late summer with unique white or pink flowers that resemble a turtle snout. These plants develop deep root systems that help water soak into the soil and keep the garden looking good all season.
There is also a practical maintenance side to rain gardens. They need regular weeding, especially in the first couple of years before the plants fill in. The water flows and sediment that come with stormwater can carry weed seeds into the garden. A 2-inch layer of shredded hardwood mulch on the surface helps suppress weeds and protect the soil from erosion during heavy flow events. You will also need to check the inlet and overflow areas periodically to make sure they are not blocked by debris. In Cedar Falls, where fall leaves can pile up fast, that means clearing the garden before winter sets in and again in spring.
Rain gardens are a smart investment for Cedar Valley homeowners who want to manage stormwater responsibly and add something unique to their landscape. They reduce the load on storm sewers, protect local waterways from runoff pollution, and give you a garden full of native plants that attract pollinators. We design and install rain gardens across Cedar Falls and Waterloo. If you have a spot in your yard that stays wet after every rain, or if you just want to do something productive with your downspout runoff, give us a call. We will help you pick the right location and design a garden that handles the water and looks great doing it.