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This French drain serves as drainage for
both
the driveway and the side and rear garden beds.
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Ooh la la! French drains
By Ginny Stibolt
While I love to garden, I'll do what
I can to reduce routine maintenance—in
garden-lingo that means weeding.
I was struck by the faintly snide comment by the former owner during
our final walk-through when we bought our house last year: "Now you
get to weed this garden." She was speaking of the front
garden bed where a drainage system was covered with a
layer of lava rocks. She was right: it was a weed magnet.
Over the last few weeks, my husband
and I uncovered the drainage systems in both the front and side beds.
For some reason, there are two types of systems. Then we put
down weed barrier and re-mulched the beds. Before we look at our
projects, here's some information on French drains.
French drains
A French drain is a trench
filled with rocks, gravel, sand or other pervious media constructed to absorb
and direct
water to a distant point. Sometimes the trench is lined with
tiles. Modern French drains often include a porous, cloth-covered pipe
for faster drainage and longer effectiveness. French drains are also
known as blind drains because the entrance of water is by percolation and not
open channels and most often they are not noticeable.
We had a vague idea that
the use of "French" as the descriptor of the drainage system
must have had its origin in France—maybe
in wine country. Can't you just picture the vineyard managers cutting
drainage ditches and then filling them with rocks so they could drive
their work carts along the rows of grape vines? I found no evidence that this
was the origin of the term.
I did see some articles that claimed that Romans used what we now call French
drains in building their roads. French drains were discovered
in the archeological digs at Monticello, but as far as I could find,
Thomas Jefferson didn't call them that. One of my dictionaries says
the term originated in 1770's. E. Crocker posted a guess on
the etymology (
www.crockerltd.net/Freedom+drains.htm
) with an analogy of the use of the term "freedom fries"
and quotes a 17th century glossary that since sewer is
French in origin, that "the 17th century Brits,
in a similar fit of pique, may have made a memorable verbal association.
" This seems like too much of stretch to me.
Then I found an article that stated Henry French, a judge and a farmer
in Concord, Massachusetts, wrote a book called, Farm Drainage,
The Principles, Processes, and Effects of Draining Land with Stones,
Wood, Plows, and Open Ditches and Especially with Tiles Including
Tables of Rain-Fall, Evaporation, Filtration, Evacuation, Capacity
of Pipes; Cost and Number to the Acre, of Tiles, Etc, Etc.
Published in 1859, his book with the really long title was quite
successful and he was well known in the area for designing drainage
systems. People started to call the drains he designed French
drains. (
www.concordma.com/magazine/janfeb00/frenchdrains.html)
This article
goes so far as to say that Judge French invented the French drain,
and even if we use his name to describe the drainage system, we know he didn't
invent it. Unless, maybe he was a Roman road engineer in one of
his former lives. Hmm... The
true etymology of the term may forever be unknown, but no matter where it
originates, French drains make managing water flows easier.
A highly visible weed magnet
It's downright embarrassing
when the most visible garden of your house is always full of weeds no matter
how much you work it. So after almost a year in our house, we finally
got around to fixing this eyesore.
With a Gardenia (Gardenia
augusta) on one end and a Sago (Cycas
revoluta) on the other, the Japanese Hollies (Ilex crenata
'Helleri') are lined up like so many gum drops in between.
The Liriope (Liriope
muscari `Variegata') also known as Lily Turf had been planted
in bunches along the front of the bed. And it was here that the
weeds just loved it. (Liriope rhymes with calliope with the
accent on the long "I" in the middle, in case you were
wondering.)
I
took a deep breath before starting this project, because I knew it would
take a while. We pulled out the lava rocks and dug out the Liriope and
the weeds. There was no weed barrier, hence the problem with the
weeds. What were they thinking?
We discovered that the pipe with its drain cages popping up at irregular
intervals was ordinary, impervious four-inch PVC. This meant
that lava rock was not necessary for drainage and that this is not
a true French drain because there's no percolation. The drain
system begins under the downspout at the north end of the house
(near the Gardenia), then threads along the sidewalk, under the
lawn, and out near the pond. I put a rain garden there to
catch and slow down the water. (For more detail on rain gardens:
www.sky-bolt.com/RainGardens.htm.)
Having
removed all the lava rock, we filled the bed with sand
to bring it closer to the level of the drains. We put down black fiberglass
cloth weed barrier. We rinsed off the lava rocks because they were
filled with dirt and sand. We surrounded each drain cage with the
washed rocks to keep the mulch out.
We decided to use the Liriope along this bed, but as a real border and not in clumps.
So when we put down the weed barrier, we left a two-inch gap and put down some good
soil next to the sidewalk. We'll have to weed this area for a while
until the Liriope fills in, but that shouldn't take too long. It's an indestructible,
evergreen ground cover that has become invasive back in Maryland where we
lived before.
I don't know what to plant
between the hollies and the edge, but I'll know it when I see it. This
bed gets full morning sun, but is shaded all afternoon. Any
suggestions?
A
true French drain
The side bed has a true French
drain system. Pictured above, the flexible, porous pipe has a fiberglass cloth
sleeve to keep
sand and dirt from clogging the pipe. The termination drain at the end does very
little for the drainage itself, but can serve as the entrance for a plumber's
snake if the pipe becomes clogged. Having access to the drainage
system will prolong its useful life.
This drain runs along the
edge of the driveway, around the corner along the back flower bed and
sidewalk where it accepts direct flow from two downspouts, before it heads out under
the lawn out to the woods where it
releases its flow into the drainage ditch from the pond to the lake.
The rain garden that I installed there is more of a liner for the ditch so
no erosion takes place before the water joins the pond overflow.
We removed the lava rocks,
rinsed them off to remove the sand, and set them aside. We pulled out
all the weeds and and graded the bed. At this point we laid down the
weed barrier. We decided that we liked this unwoven weed barrier better than the black
fiberglass cloth we used on the front bed, because fine roots
cannot penetrate it. Even though I like the black color and the fact the
the fiberglass cloth will stretch making it easier to install, we'll use the
unwoven material for all future projects. If
plants can't use it a growing medium, it will be effective for longer.
Of course, there'll be the weeds that sprout from the top of the mulch, but
generally, they are easier to handle.
We laid the weed barrier to
the bottom of the pipe to help keep out the dirt and then piled the freshly
washed lava stones all along the pipe to slightly above the level of the
driveway. After mulching the bed itself, the whole area looks much
neater. And we hope that it will stay that way. Now I have
to replace my leather gardening gloves, because after washing and working
with all those darn lava rocks, there were holes in every finger.
We'll be planting some more yellow Lantana (Lantana
camara) between the Hibiscus (Hibiscus
Rosa-sinensis) because it does really well in this location
and stays pretty low to the ground. We'll just brush the mulch
aside and slice a cross in the barrier when we plant the new bushes.
Actually, I'm trying to root some Lantana from the cuttings made
as we trimmed back the bushes. More adventures on this later.
Look for more details and pictures of French
drains and other projects
that are not included in my regular articles on
www.transplantedgardener.com.
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