Contact Us

Telephone: 707-978-4149

FAX: 707-937-3146

email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

Mailing Address:
P.O. Box 6417
Santa Rosa, CA 95406

(Mendocino mailing address:  P.O. Box 274, Mendocino, CA 95460)

Physical Address:
150 Todd Road, Studio D
Santa Rosa CA 95407

 

Rain Catches is a program by the North Coast Resource Conservation & Development Council, which consists of a Board of Directors, staff and volunteers:

BOARD MEMBERS

Peter Braudrick, President

Darcie Mahoney, Vice-President

Susan Warner, Treasurer

Ron Rolleri, Secretary

Harry Lyons

Ann Cassidy

(short biographies of Board Members can be found here)

STAFF & VOLUNTEERS

Oona Padgett, Executive Director

Stefan Stehling, Conservationist

Joan Weir, Conservationist (volunteer)

Hope Rambo, Office Assistant (volunteer)

 

Dawn Rich, Intern Conservationist (volunteer)

Samantha Murray, Intern Conservationist (volunteer)

and many more volunteers for individual programs

 

We can be reached at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. and 707-978-4149, and by mail at P.O. Box 6417 Santa Rosa, CA 95406.  Our office is located at 150 Todd Road, Studio D, Santa Rosa 95407..

threegoats

You can join our Human Race Team--The Human Race is a nationwide community fundraising event for nonprofit organizations and every year we participate in the spring in Santa Rosa, becoming part of the largest collaborative fundraising event in Sonoma County as well as the largest Human Race in the nation! The 2020 Human Race in Sonoma County is on May 2, and features a walk through Howarth and Spring Lake Parks, rain or shine--families (and their dogs) walk, and many kids and adults wear great costumes! Some of the best are caterpillar costumes with multiple walkers wearing a caterpillar outfit!

Organizations like ours recruit walkers/runners/donation-gatherers to raise funds.  The run and walk is open to all. The Human Race is a proven fundraiser that has been successful for Sonoma County nonprofits for 35 years and continues to grow. Last year, the  NCRC&DC had its best year ever--all to support our programs where simple changes make for big impact in climate change, water conservation, pollinator habitat protection, composting waste instead of landfilling, and more.

You can join our team!  If you want to talk to someone about being on our walking team, call Oona at 978-4149, or email us at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

WANT TO VOLUNTEER WITH US?

We are looking for volunteers in all of our programs!  Please contact us at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

 handscatchingrainWe Catch Water!

 

Welcome to the Home Page of Rain Catchers -- water conservation using rooftop collection and storage of rain water! Water conservation is key to community sustainability, especially at times of drought. Athough the rains of winter can seem heavy, warming global temperatures make drought years in northern and central California potentially more common in the future.  We also know that the pressures on water in California will continue--we have too little water, and conservation is the "new normal." 

Why is it important to conserve water, and can one person's water conservation efforts make any difference? Did you know that just by turning off the tap while you brush your teeth in the morning and before bedtime, you can save over 1 gallon of water (and high flow faucetts make the savings even bigger--almost 8 gallons Brushing Teeth Watersaved by turning off the tap). That may not sound like much, but one gallon can supply the daily drinking water needs for two people (eight 8-ounce glasses of water a day is the recommended amount we should each drink in a day).  Even if you only save 1 gallon of water a day by turning the tap off while brushing your teeth, if every one else in your community did the same thing--think what that would mean:  for a small town like Cloverdale in Sonoma County with just under 9,000 residents, that is at least 9,000 gallons a day, and 3,285,000 gallons a year!  That amount of water is enough to supply ALL of the annual water needs of 250 people if following the UC-Berkeley suggested sustainable guidance of 35 gallons per person per day!  So, remember that every drop counts, and small changes can make a big difference.

Conserving water use during drier months is critically important to people, fish, and wildlife in the region.  Harvesting rainwater for later dry season use is a conservation activity our Council has encouraged for several years in our “Rain Catchers” program.  Our “Rain Catchers in Your Schools” program partners with a salmon population 1school and provides funding and design support for collecting rainwater runoff from rooftops during winter peak flow times, storing the collected water in large tanks, and using the stored water during the dry season for irrigation in lieu of traditional water supplies that rely on reservoir storage, stream flow, or groundwater.  More water in the summer is important for all of us--including fish and wildlife equally dependent on our scarce water supplies.

 The Council is a major supporter of environmental education programs because by informing people of how they can make a small difference in their daily lives, people can cumulatively  make big differences in the daily lives of everyone.  We are helping buld a better future for Marin, Sonoma, Mendocino, and Lake Counties.