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How to Build a Rain Garden in Maryland

A rain garden is a shallow, planted basin that catches the water rushing off your roof or driveway, lets it soak into the ground instead of flooding your yard, and filters out pollutants before they reach the Chesapeake. It turns your soggiest problem spot into the lushest, most alive part of the garden — here's one I built at my own house.

Maryland bonus: Montgomery County and Prince George's County both have generous rebate programs for installing rain gardens. Many other counties and towns have similar programs. Reach out if you have any questions and we can try to get you a garden for a big discount!

The basicsA simplified version of how I lay one out.

Zone 1 — the bottom (wettest)Plants that don't mind "wet feet" after a storm.

Zone 2 — the slopes (occasionally wet)

Zone 3 — the edges (driest)

Got a spot that floods every time it rains?

A rain garden is one of the most rewarding fixes there is — beautiful, functional, and good for the Bay. I'll design one sized for your runoff.

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See also: Best Native Plants for Pollinators · Native Plants for Clay Soil · All guides