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Gachina Landscape Management is a minority and women-owned business in the San Francisco Bay Area. One of their services offered is sustainable landscaping, both in installation and maintenance. "Gachina Landscape Management has a commitment to its employees, clients, vendors, the environment and the future generations," said Cristina Prevarin, sustainable landscape manager. "We want to do our part in promoting landscape maintenance practices that deliver less chemicals to the ground, the water, the air." Though recent rains brought parts of California out of drought, emergency water savings are still in place, so water management is a big issue for sustainable landscapes. One solution involves making and managing water budgets, the accounting of all water that flows in and out of a project area. Advancements in irrigation technology help: rain and moisture sensors, drip irrigation, low flow nozzles and weather-based irrigation controllers ensure that plants are neither over- nor under-watered. Where appropriate, drought tolerant landscapes are designed and installed as a means to control water usage.
All of the compost Gachina uses is completely organic. Yard clippings and other green waste are taken to local cow farms. In some cases, the landscape maintenance team uses mulch mowers to return grass clippings back to the soil, or they mulch leaves on site. Planters are mulched with wood chips provided by local tree companies. When turf needs to be removed or an area is overrun by weeds, they sheet mulch the area, eliminating unwanted plant material naturally instead of through the application of herbicides. In fact, no herbicides or pesticides are used on the landscapes sustainably maintained by Gachina. Pests are eliminated through the broadcasting of beneficial predators and parasites, including ladybugs and lacewings. Local materials are a priority – whenever possible, plants and other material are purchased locally. To minimize the company's environmental impact, daily tasks are performed with battery-operated equipment, lowering their VOC (volatile organic compound) emissions and reducing pollution.
Wherever they can, the Gachina team creates certified bee refuges and wildlife habitats. One such sustainably maintained landscape and wildlife habitat is the Del Monte Shopping Center in Monterey, Calif. In part because of the sustainable practices implemented, the shopping center was designated as a certified monarch garden by the North American Butterfly Association. "Through the installation of the most appropriate plant material, the ban of synthetic pesticides and herbicides, the implementation of more green practices, Gachina Landscape Management is providing not only shelter, water and food but also a safe and healthy environment to the local pollinators and wildlife," Prevarin said. "All of the above goes hand in hand with delivering a beautiful landscape, in which quality is still the priority," she concluded.
The Gachina Farm Pays Tribute to Founder In April 2015, the Gachina Farm, a construction yard that was redesigned as a farm and garden, was recognized as a Certified Wildlife Habitat by the National Wildlife Federation. The 5,000 square foot space provides a home for bees, ladybugs, butterflies, wild birds, squirrels, foxes and hummingbirds. "Everything that gets seeded or planted is organic. The majority of the purchased plant material comes from a local nonprofit organization," Prevarin explained. "The harvest gets shared between our employees and a culinary class of a local nonprofit organization." John Gachina, founder of Gachina Landscape Management, passed away in December 2015 at the age of 64. One year after the Farm's official designation as a Certified Wildlife Habitat, the Gachina Landscape family celebrated his life and vision by dedicating the farm to his memory and legacy. Employees and their families painted rocks and stepping-stones "as a tangible token of appreciation to John, for all he has represented and all he has done for each one of us throughout his long and memorable career and life," Prevarin said. They were placed in the farm on Earth Day 2016 in his memory.
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