sgear

About sgear

Scott is a landscape designer who's philosophy has always centered around living closer to nature. Since 2000, his designs have reflected this and increasingly he has become obsessed with designing creative ways to save water in landscapes. As a designer, the focus of enhancing both form and function have led to this inevitable conclusion: something has to be done to make water conservation more attractive. That something, he believes, is integrating its storage into every possible landscape element, and that is what he and his wife Emily are doing at Second Rain.

Rain Bench tips & tricks

By |2017-03-08T12:42:31+00:00April 16th, 2015|how-to, raindom|

The instructions are pretty self-explanatory, but here are a few little tips and tricks that we have figured out after building a few of these Rain Bench things... 1.  First, read through the instructions before you start.  I know, I know, they always say that, but it might save you some hassle, that's all I'm saying. [...]

Rainwater to Drinking Water

By |2020-09-14T09:19:14+00:00April 16th, 2015|Design, design ideas, how-to, rain harvesting examples, raindom, sustainable design|

standing in the rain with your mouth open is one way to drink rainwater.  Catching and filtering  it is another... ...first a disclaimer: I am no licensed plumber. He ran for the hills when we tried to hire him, so this is what I figured out on my own. I am not saying this is the [...]

retrofit: Rain Collecting Cap

By |2016-12-12T06:29:44+00:00March 25th, 2015|design ideas, how-to, rain harvesting examples, raindom, sustainable design|

Here is just one way to modify your existing rain bench to make the cap itself collect rainwater and put it inside your bench....  RainBench Retrofit: Collect water that falls on your rain bench, too. *This retrofit is for standard 65 gallon Rain Bench made with 1 DIY kit, 1 sheet of plywood and some 2x2s… [...]

Eco-Patio | Recycled Plastic Chairs

By |2016-12-12T06:29:44+00:00February 15th, 2015|design ideas, for the garden, sustainable design|

...because putting 670 milk jugs on your patio wouldn't be nearly as comfortable. Made from locally recycled plastic from recycling plants in southern Wisconsin, designed and built in Middleton, WI, these chairs offer a ridiculously comfortable and decent looking end use for all of that plastic you've been faithfully putting in your recycling. Why are [...]

Limited Time, Rebates = Free Rain Benches

By |2017-04-04T14:11:24+00:00December 14th, 2014|design ideas, rain harvesting examples, sustainable design|

Finally.  You can get that bench, or outdoor bar, or garden shed, or all 3.   Ok, not for free but it might just be TOTALLY paid for with rebates... There are a growing number of incentives and rebates now available due to 'Pilot An outdoor kitchen built with Rain Bench kits Programs' that were [...]

Permeable Paving

By |2016-12-12T06:29:45+00:00February 22nd, 2013|design ideas, how-to, rain harvesting examples, sustainable design|

make it permeable. That's right.  Allowing rainwater to go down into the ground is the most natural, permaculture-esque form of rainwater harvesting.  And you don't have to have a rain garden to do it. a permeable patio A simple change in basic materials, at no extra cost, can make your patio permeable.  The one pictured [...]

the Second Rain story

By |2016-12-12T06:29:45+00:00March 17th, 2012|for inventors, how-to, sustainable design|

Part 1 of an Infinite-Part Series... I was recently asked to speak to a great local group, the Evansville Inventors & Entrepreneurs Club, and was asked to tell about how Second Rain went through the product-patent-to-market process, which got me thinking, as the great Jack Handy once put it: "I don't pretend to know all the [...]

Cedar Rain Bench update

By |2016-12-12T06:29:45+00:00June 14th, 2011|rain harvesting examples, raindom|

We were so excited about this we just had to share... Yep, it's a bench.   Yep, it's a rain barrel. It even catches the rain that falls on its surface while collecting roof runoff, too.  Unlike many previous designs, the fittings are hidden so only the tubes (for filling and overflow) show. [wp_eStore_add_to_cart id=6] The [...]

It’s Raining… compost?

By |2016-12-12T06:29:45+00:00June 9th, 2011|for the garden|

Raining Compost? What on earth is that supposed to mean!?Well, not really RAINING Compost.  But I got your attention, didn't I?  We are talking about using it, and mulch.  And how does it have anything todo with rainwater harvesting? Ok, let’s look at the purpose(s) of harvesting rain: it’s free (aside from the cost of storage, [...]

the natural way to harvest rain

By |2017-03-01T12:45:30+00:00May 22nd, 2011|for the garden, rain harvesting examples, raindom, sustainable design|

Tip of the Week #5 (archived, May 2011): dig a swale …what’s a swale, you ask?  Oh, just a depression that usually directs water from where you don’t want it to where you do.  I say ‘usually’ because we are promoting a more indirect method, for the purpose of groundwater recharge/ infiltration.  So in [...]

Contact Info

8727 Airport Rd
Middleton, WI 53562

Phone: 608-836-8448

Web: secondrain.com

All of our products are designed, manufactured and assembled in the USA. We care about our environment and our customers, and thanks for supporting small business!

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