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7
Tips For Better Watering
Follow
these tips to give your lawn and garden
plants a good, quenching drink. You'll be
rewarded with larger, healthier growth in
no time!
- Water
less frequently, more deeply.
Lawns, shrubs, flowers and vegetables
will grow deeper, stronger roots when
watered thoroughly. And stronger roots
make better use of the water that's in
the soil, so you can water less. On average,
most plants can be watered once a week
or less.
- Water
in the morning. The heat of
the day will dry plant foliage, while
watering at night makes plants susceptible
to fungus
and
other diseases caused by excessive moisture.
Also, the air is more likely to be still
in the morning, so evaporation is minimal.
- Improve
your soil. Here's something you
should do annually or even 2 or 3 times
a year if you have "problem" soil: dig
in large amounts of peat moss, manure,
shredded bark or other organic materials
to help your soil use moisture more efficiently.
Organic matter lightens clay soil so there's
better water penetration and less run
off, while it gives sandy soil the ability
to hold moisture and nutrients longer.
- Vary
your watering schedule with the weather.
Watering on a strict schedule
can cause plants to suffer either dried-out
or water-logged roots. Instead, let the
weather help determine when you water.
Excessively hot and/or windy weather calls
for more frequent watering. A good rainstorm
will allow you to skip a session.
- Mulch
plants to help them retain moisture. A
2-4" layer of bark dust or other organic
matter around your plants helps prevent
evaporation so they can use more of the
water you provide.

- Install
drip irrigation in your garden beds.
A drip system delivers water at low pressure
and volume to individual plants or specific
areas. This allows soil to better absorb
the water and your plants to better utilize
it. You can install a system of plastic
tubing with emitters or simply lay soaker
hoses around plants. And don't forget
to add a water timer to turn the system
on and off for you automatically. You
can practically set it and forget it --
a timer will turn your water on and off
on just about any schedule you want.
- Limit
overhead water to no more than 20 minutes
at a time. Overhead sprinklers
may be a great convenience, but they sometimes
deliver water faster than the ground can
absorb it. For better water absorption,
turn these types of sprinklers on for
about 20 minutes, then shut them off to
allow water to thoroughly soak into the
soil. Check down several inches into the
soil to see how far water has penetrated.
If it hasn't reached down 7- 8", then
turn your sprinklers back on for another
5-10 minutes. Repeat this process until
moisture has soaked down far enough. Then,
once you know your soil's absorption rate,
you can set a timer to do this for you
automatically.
Here's
to smarter watering and better results!
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