'Make & Take' Rain Barrel Workshop - Just $35!

Wednesday, June 26, 2019 - 6:00pm to 7:30pm
Wellstone Center, St. Paul
Workshop participants assembling a rain barrel

What's one of the simplest, high-impact ways to save water and help protect our watershed? Using a rain barrel.

Lawn and garden watering typically makes up 40% of total summer household water usage, according to the EPA. Plus, the biggest threat to our waters today is polluted runoff water that runs off our roofs and into our streets and alleys, carrying all the oil, sediment and other contaminants that it picks up along the way into our lakes, rivers and streams.

For conservation and for pollution prevention, installing a rain barrel to collect and store rainwater for use on your lawn and gardens is a simple but powerful way to make a difference for the Mississippi River.

Thanks to Great Lakes Coca-Cola of Eagan, FMR has used syrup containers for participants to turn into rain barrels. During the course of this workshop, participants will be provided with the necessary parts ($35 per kit) and guided through the process of converting these containers into allies for a cleaner Mississippi River.

The workshop will begin with a presentation on how home lawn and garden practices impact our waters and how we can make a difference.

Next, we'll discuss the watershed-friendly benefits of rain barrels in more detail, then review how to build, incorporate, install and maintain them. With guidance from FMR staff, participants will then build their very own rain barrel to take home following the workshop.

Claim your barrel + kit now!

 

 

Can't make it?

To be notified of future water quality or rain barrel workshops contact FMR Volunteer Coordinator Amy Kilgore, akilgore@fmr.org

Learn more

Rain Barrels

• Landscape for the River

Thank you to our partners and funders: 

Great Lakes Coca-Cola of Eagan and funder City of St. Paul Public Works.

Upcoming Events

Wednesday, December 11, 2024 - 6:00pm to 8:00pm
Friends of the Mississippi River office in St. Paul
This school year
In your classroom or outside

Our River Campaign:
It all starts here

At the heart of this new campaign is the vision of a healthy Mississippi River.