Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
Life

Soak or drip? Watering advice for the hot season

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Jul, 2020 09:17 PM
  • Soak or drip? Watering advice for the hot season

August is the month for two garden W’s: weeding and watering. Regular attention to both keeps a vegetable or flower garden pretty and productive well into autumn.

For now, let’s look at watering.

It’s not necessarily less rain that makes soils drier in August; it’s August’s combination of heat and lush plant growth that quickly dries the soil.

Don’t expect to recharge your soil with water by standing in place with hose in hand, directing a shower of water onto your tomato plants. You may find this satisfying and relaxing on a hot summer evening, but no one has the patience to stand fixed in place long enough to do plants any good. If you don’t believe me, scratch an inch or so into the soil with your finger the next time you finish watering in this manner. Unless you held the hose immobile for about an hour, only the surface is wet.

INFREQUENT, DEEP WATERING FOR DEEP ROOTING

Shallow watering develops shallow root systems that can’t reach water deeper in the ground. Promote deep rooting by giving your soil weekly, but thorough, soakings that wet the soil at least 6 inches deep. One inch of water on top of the soil will do this, as measured in straight-sided cans set out with your sprinkler. Or, equivalently, apply about a half a gallon of water over every square foot of ground.

You’ll probably do this weekly watering with a sprinkler. Most sprinklers take about an hour to put down that inch of water.

Some gardeners shy away from watering when the sun shines for fear that beads of water on the leaves will act as magnifying glasses and burn the leaves. Not true! (How many plants die after a sun shower?) Midday is not the best time to water because evaporation and wind will carry much of the water off target. Nighttime also is not a good time to water because the leaves stay wet too long, promoting diseases.

Early morning or late afternoon, when the air is cooler and usually calmer and leaves dry off reasonably fast, are the best times to water with a sprinkler.

FREQUENT, SHALLOW WATERING IS AN OPTION

The shallow watering and the resulting shallow rooting that I cautioned against are bad only if you can’t keep up with the shallow watering. You CAN keep up with it -- and reap other benefits -- with an alternative method of watering called drip, or trickle, irrigation.

The essence of drip irrigation is simply a plastic pipe laid in the garden row, with emitters at intervals out of which water slowly drips. Dripping takes longer but is more efficient than sprinkling (it was developed for farming the desert by Israeli agricultural scientists), because water can be applied slowly to approximately offset what plants are using. Dripped water is less subject to evaporation and lessens the chance of diseases by not wetting plant leaves. The shallow layers of soil are also where beneficial bacteria, fungi and other soil microorganisms are most active.

Drip irrigation, by pinpointing water near your garden plants, also results in less weeding. A sprinkler spreads water not only to your garden plants, but also to paths and areas between rows, where it promotes weed growth.

Drip irrigation is really more than just plastic pipes with holes in them. The emitters are engineering marvels that drip consistent amounts of water along their lengths and are somewhat self-cleaning. Despite that self-cleaning feature, every drip system should also begin with a sediment filter.

One of the best features of drip irrigation is that makes frequent, shallow watering possible simply by attaching a timer to your hose spigot. I set my timer each spring and hardly think about watering at all until I bring it and the sediment filter back indoors in autumn. Drip lines can be left in place outdoors all year.

Reserve hand watering for the first few days that vegetable and flower transplants are in the ground, and for your weekly deep watering for newly planted trees and shrubs.

It might seem that almost every time you finish your hand watering, rain falls. Cause and effect? No. It’s your imagination (chuckle, chuckle).

MORE Life ARTICLES

Thank Your Grandma For A Super Romantic Life!

Thank Your Grandma For A Super Romantic Life!
If you have finally discovered who is going to be your life partner, do not just thank your stars but all grandmothers since human evolved as the act of “grandmothering” has helped us bond well throughout the history, interesting research has shown.

Thank Your Grandma For A Super Romantic Life!

As Porn Watching Rises Among Indian Women, Experts Say It's Double-Edged Sword

As Porn Watching Rises Among Indian Women, Experts Say It's Double-Edged Sword
As more Indians surf for online pornography, despite efforts to ban it, experts caution that excessive exposure to explicit sex on the net may result in some of them turning into porn addicts and hypersexuals.

As Porn Watching Rises Among Indian Women, Experts Say It's Double-Edged Sword

In Love? Drop An E-mail And Woo Your Girl

In Love? Drop An E-mail And Woo Your Girl
If Cupid's arrow has hit you finally, it is still better to express your feelings via an e-mail than leaving a voice message or a WhatsApp post with the girl you are in love with, says an interesting study.

In Love? Drop An E-mail And Woo Your Girl

Women In Male-Dominated Offices Undergo High Stress

Women In Male-Dominated Offices Undergo High Stress
Most women working in male-dominating occupations are prone to high levels of stress that can trigger poor health in them, a study has found.

Women In Male-Dominated Offices Undergo High Stress

'Garbage Gardening': Recycling Pits, Seeds, Roots And Other Kitchen Scraps Into Plants

'Garbage Gardening': Recycling Pits, Seeds, Roots And Other Kitchen Scraps Into Plants
"Garbage gardening" is an easy and inexpensive way to grow flowers and edibles using kitchen scraps — the pits, seeds and roots that otherwise would be headed to a landfill. It's a fun way to recycle. Educational for the kids, too.

'Garbage Gardening': Recycling Pits, Seeds, Roots And Other Kitchen Scraps Into Plants

CONTEST: LIKE Darpan's Facebook Page, Share Posts And Win Free Passes To The Fair At PNE Worth $500

CONTEST: LIKE Darpan's Facebook Page, Share Posts And Win Free Passes To The Fair At PNE Worth $500
Like our page and share the most number of Darpan posts on Facebook and win free passes to The Fair at PNE worth upto $500

CONTEST: LIKE Darpan's Facebook Page, Share Posts And Win Free Passes To The Fair At PNE Worth $500