Overhead Watering Vegetable Garden
More water is lost to evaporation than is absorbed by the soil.
Overhead watering vegetable garden. Along with soil and sunlight water is an extremely vital part of your garden s success. Do use soaker hoses to water vegetable gardens. Check on your plants every day or two and irrigate them when the top half inch or inch of soil is dry or when plants begin to wilt. Water too much and some plants like tomatoes and squash will be more prone to disease and even start to look very unhappy.
A sprinkler is effective for watering vegetables planted in sandy soil that absorbs water quickly. But watering your vegetable garden can be tricky. Listen in below to the full podcast episode 188 best way to water vegetable garden to increase harvest eliminate disease of the pioneering today podcast where we don t just inspire you but give you the clear steps to create the homegrown garden pantry kitchen and life you want for your family and homestead. Overhead watering is wasteful because as much as 30 percent of the water evaporates before it reaches the plant s root zone.
It s also an effective way to water a large garden. When 1 inch collects in the containers that indicates that 1 inch of water was applied to the garden. The myth that water droplets act like tiny magnifying glasses and burn plant leaves has no basis in fact and anyone who has watched the sun come out after a summer. Watering the vegetable garden.
To measure overhead sprinkling place 4 or 5 small containers straight sided around the garden while the water is being applied. The best way to water your vegetable garden with a hose is to leave the hose running at a trickle in a basin near each plant until the water has soaked down at least 6 inches deep. Strategically placed containers. Do use a watering wand to water annuals and perennials both in ground and containers.
Another way to figure out how much water it follow a general rule of thumb of one inch of water per week. Don t use overhead sprinklers in vegetable gardens. Overhead watering on a sunny day can scorch leaves there are good reasons to avoid watering your garden on a sunny afternoon but causing scorched leaves isn t one of them. By alternating sections of soaker hose and garden hose you can set up a watering system in minutes that applies water where you need it and not where you don t.
Traditional overhead or sprinkler watering makes it easier for you to know how much water is dropping onto the vegetable garden. Again hit the ground not the plant. Soaker hoses use up to 80 percent less water than overhead watering. Whether you water with a hose bucket drip irrigation system or sprinkler regular irrigation is the edible gardener s most important chore.