4 Advantages of Adding Drainage System to Your Lawn

When it rains, it pours and that may leave your yard looking like a swamp area in some backwoods. When it comes to preparing lawns, having a drainage system often gets overlooked; which is unfortunate as there are plenty of benefits to having a drainage system that can actually make your life a little bit easier.

Water is a natural element that can be a friend or foe to your lawn, and a trench drainage system is extremely important for keeping it a friend of your landscaping design. If you are observing standing water, unexpected changes in soil, or even leaking water in your basement, it may be time to consider the advantages of adding a drainage system to your lawn.

When it comes to adding a drainage system to your lawn the rewards far outweigh the risks. Drainage systems help manage the water flow in your lawns to avert situations of overwhelm, accidents, and damage, and there are different types to suit various lawn requirements. Here are four advantages of adding a drainage system to your lawn.

Prevent Soil Erosion

Water is a natural element that can erode soil just like the air and sun on top. Water moving across the soil in your lawn can be displaced to undesirable areas. Soil from a carved garden area can wind up down a driveway. A pretty step-stone area under trees, buried under dirt and mud. Perfectly laid mulch, on the street and in the gutters.

When enough soil erosion occurs, shifting your soil out of place, issues can arise with your lawn’s soil depth. Without a drainage system, problems in soil depth can, in turn, damage landscaping.

In an already landscaped lawn, soil erosion can impede the girth and longevity of the plant life. When getting ready to plant and garden, soil erosion can make it impossible to create a suitable soil environment for plants to flourish.

Avert Standing Water

It may be fun to play in the rain and the puddles it creates, make mud pies, and play water wars, but standing water on your lawn can be a potentially big problem. It goes beyond slips and falls on slippery surfaces; still, no one wants to take a fall in water at any point.

Standing water does not only create a slip hazard it drowns your lawn. Yes, your lawn and additional plants in your landscaping need water, but they don’t need to be drowned in it. There is only so much water the soil can take up, and once it reaches its limit, the water sits on any available surfaces.

Sitting water, or rather, now standing water, creates a pool of problems. A drowned lawn creates the perfect environment for soil gnats, fungus, and rotting plant roots. Repairing such damage can become quite costly.

When water is standing in your lawn it becomes a pool for undesirables. If you live in a hot and humid area, it is a beacon for mosquitoes–which nobody wants. It’s also a bed for small critters like frogs, water spiders, and small snakes. This does not even come close to all the bacteria and microbes that can wreak havoc on any open cuts if you slip in the water.

Thwart Water Damage

 

Water is not only a natural element but a powerful force that can easily do damage to your property if not attended to. Just as you take precautions to safeguard your home from crime, structural damage, and potential accidents, it is important to protect against other unforeseen and unplanned damages as a result of water damage. This is particularly true for wet areas.

The potential for water damage, especially in residences out of flood zones, is not as high a priority, but if one good rainstorm comes through, the likelihood of severe or cascading damages can skyrocket. Water can seep into all those nooks, crannies, and void spaces that are not known. The water damage then created becomes not only costly but challenging to fix.

If water slips into the cracks in the foundation of your home, then it does more than just mess up your impeccably landscaped lawn. It can damage the foundation of your home. During a storm, water flows fast and it can unravel your home’s foundation.

Foundation damage can lead to water leakage in basements and the attraction of local critters. When the foundation is damaged enough, your home is no longer safe to live in, but this can be averted by adding a drainage system.

Increase Your Property Value and Real Estate Attractiveness

A drainage system goes beyond the practical function to include the added monetary benefit of increasing your home’s property value. Many times when a property has any additional work done, such as adding a loft, a pool, and new tiling, or, in this case, a drainage system, it can increase the property value of that home and its attractiveness to buyers.

Making your property look and function the best is a particularly real estate advantage. The home standouts, as this solves many problems that homebuyers will, likely, not have to worry about in the future.

This is advantageous for anyone who is looking to sell or reinvest their property for another purpose. With affordable professionals and even handy instructional, tacking on a drainage system to your lawn can be an excellent property investment before moving and selling your home.

 

The drainage system requirements of every home differs, but your lawn can always benefit from the addition of a drainage system. The drainage system can keep your lawn nice and healthy with the prevention of soil erosion, standing water, and foundation damage, and increase your home’s value.

When the greenery surrounding your home is bright and healthy with happy lawn care, your home will undoubtedly shine. You avoid potential risks, such as slips and falls, and hazards like fungus and unstable foundations. Turn to professional lawn care services or learn through instructional DIY resources to add a drainage system to your lawn.

 

Kimberly Atwood’s books have received starred reviews in Publishers Weekly, Library Journal, and Booklist. Kimberly lives in the Rocky Mountains with her husband, an exceptionally perfect dog, and an attack cat. Before she started writing historical research, Kimberly got a graduate degree in theoretical physical chemistry from Ohio State University. After that, just to shake things up, she went to law school at the University of London and graduated summa cum laude. Then she did a handful of clerkships with some really important people who are way too dignified to be named here. She was a law professor for a while. She now writes full-time.

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