...a late season, heavy,wet snow blankets seed heads left standing and tree limbs
...reminding us of the beautythat can be overlooked during those cold, blustery days 
...that will soon becom  a distant memory
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| (from Rain Gardens - A how-to manual for homeowners) | 
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| (from Prairie Nursery - 184 plant garden in 192 sq ft will handle a rooftop run off for a 950 square foot roof area) | 
| S P E C I E S | BLOOM / COLOR | # of PLANTS | 
|---|---|---|
| Rose Milkweed | Jun - Aug | 3 | 
| New England Aster | Aug - Oct | 3 | 
| Joe Pye Weed | Jun - Aug | 2 | 
| Rose Mallow | Jul - Sep | 2 | 
| Southern Blue FLag | May - Jul | 3 | 
| Prairie Blazing Star | Jul - Sep | 4 | 
| Sweet Black- eyed Susan | Aug - Oct | 2 | 
| Wild Senna | Jul, Aug | 3 | 
| Prairie Dock | Jul - Sep | 2 | 
| Ohio Spiderwort | May - Jul | 3 | 
| Blue Vervain | Jul - Sep | 3 | 
| Common Ironweed | Jul - Sep | 3 | 
| Common Hop Sedge | May - Jul | 2 | 
| Brown Fox Sedge | Jun, Jul | 3 | 
| Types | Plantings | 
|---|---|
| spring/early summer bloomers | red milkweed shooting star wild iris  | 
| summer bloomers | nodding pink onion prairie blazing star  | 
| late summer/fall bloomers | New England aster Ohio goldenrod sweet black-eyed Susan  | 
| grasses | Indian grass prairie drop seed  | 
| ornamental options | Not only can these plants tolerate wet conditions, they also can withstand our Upper Midwest winters. Mixing trees, shrubs, flowers, and ground covers to create different plant levels will attract a greater diversity of wildlife to your garden. | 
| trees | red maple (prefers acid soil) river birch swamp white oak  | 
| shrubs | glossy black chokeberry northern lights azalea (prefers acid soil) red-osier dogwood  | 
| perennials and annuals | asters astilbe companula cardinal flower hosta orange coneflower salvia Siberian iris  | 
| ground covers and ferns | creeping willow dwarf arctic willow (Most mosses do well in moist, acid soils. Ferns need moist yet relatively well-drained soils.)  | 
| plants in wetland stands | Wetland gardens may have three zones – one in which plants are in for some occasional wading, one in which they continually have wet feet, and one in which they are completely immersed. Select plants accordingly. | 
| wet meadow/prairie (occasionally wet feet, dry tops) | blue lobelia boneset fox sedge Joe Pye weed ironweed meadow rue New England aster porcupine sedge red cardinal flower red milkweed switchgrass turtlehead  | 
| emergent (feet in permanent pool, dry tops) | blue flag iris marsh marigold pickerelweed softstem bulrush sweet flag wapato duck potato water plantain  | 
| submergent | native lilypad Chara  | 
| City | Number of Ponds | First Pond | 2014 Budget | 
| Appleton | 46 | 1995 | *$18.9 million | 
| Neenah | 16 | 2001 | $2.4 million | 
| Kaukauna | 18 | 1998 | $1.6 million | 
| Menasha | 15 | 1994 | $1.4 million | 
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| Lake Winnebago Harbors | 
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|  A young girl fetches water from a hand pump in an impoverished settlement in New Delhi, March 21, 2015. (India World Water Day Altaf Qadri—AP)  |