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| Drippers http://byfarming.backyardmagazines.com/phpbb3/viewtopic.php?f=22&t=73 |
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| Author: | dufflight [ Thu Jan 21, 2010 12:44 pm ] |
| Post subject: | Drippers |
I've never really used drip irrigation. But did set up a little 10ltr container with a dripper for a Jap pumpkin vine I wanted to speed up a little. It takes about 2 days to empty and does not block up with a little fert added. Growth has been almost twice to the other vines that are watered via sprinkler. I'm now thinking of using a 200ltr olive drum connected to 19mm black pipe that I can run around the yard with a tap on the end to flush it out. Then I can connect differnt lengths of small black tube with a dripper for different plants and trees around the yard. This should cut down on the weeds that I'm watering with the fruit trees. I may even drop an air stone into the olive drum if its close enough to the AP system to increase the DO in the water. |
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| Author: | BatonRouge Bill [ Thu Jan 21, 2010 1:35 pm ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Drippers |
In my dirt garden I used soaker hoses laid on top of the garden rows in little furrows after I planted. I get a lot of rain and sun where I'm at but it is very unpredictable and so I need the insurance. I use tap water with a water timer but it really only carries the plants thru until the next rain. Because I get good sun and rain normally weeds grow like...weeds. and can be areal pain once establised. I have a lot of trees and after plants are planted I mulch over heavily so as to keep emergent weeds smothered out and mulch too thick for wind blown seeds to start. Works in early spring, late spring/early summer, and fall gardens. Weeds, heat, and insects make it too much work for me in the hot summer. Usually only grow garlic ocra and peppers in hot summer, and they are kinda on their own! The water timer is nice to turn on before bed and water turns itself off. Plants draw water up all night and can take the sun better the next day. With spring tomatoes need to watch what you use as mulch. Preferably pine straw because the tomatoes like the acid and the straw doesn't creat fungus like a lot of broad leaf litter. My soil is poor so I always till the mulch in and remulch after each replanting. I used to add rabbit poop straight into the garden as it was never hot enough to burn any plants but after some good advice from people on the byap forum I'll compost first, if I don't use as substrate for mushrooms, but thats another topic |
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| Author: | earthbound [ Thu Jan 21, 2010 11:33 pm ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Drippers |
I'm about to set up drippers in pots out the front. I'll be getting pics of the process and growth. |
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| Author: | dufflight [ Fri Jan 22, 2010 8:09 am ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Drippers |
Another thing I've noticed is how the leaves hang down on one vine but don't on the one with the dripper. Means it gets to process more light during the day. |
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| Author: | chillidude [ Fri Jan 22, 2010 11:08 am ] |
| Post subject: | Re: Drippers |
Have never used drippers on veges but my orchard is all rigged up with drippers on 13mm poly pipe hooked up to the mains. It's really the only part of the block that gets mains water, everything else (no dirt vege garden at the moment) is watered from the biosystem output. |
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