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Irrigation Warehouse's
Most common Irrigation
Errors
Every landscape and/or irrigation professional
truly believes that they know what they are doing when it comes to designing,
installing and maintaining irrigation systems. However, virtually many of these
professionals have gaps in their irrigation training and knowledge. In fact,
some people simply never learned the proper way to begin with. As a result, they
can end up creating more problems by their ignorance than they solve.
Here are 11 of the most common irrigation mistakes and problems I have seen
repeated over and over throughout the U.S. during the last 30 years.
These 11 mistakes and problems are generally simple and inexpensive to correct.
Also, if you can correct these flaws within an existing irrigation system, you
can save your clients 10 to 50 percent of their current operating costs to
irrigate their landscape.
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Never put different types of irrigation
heads (rotors, sprays, bubblers, drip, etc.) on the same irrigation zone to
operate at the same time.
The precipitation and/or application rates of the nozzles and emitters of
rotor, spray, bubbler, drip, micro-irrigation, etc., systems are entirely
different. Consider the following:
a) The nozzles for rotor heads generally have somewhere between 0.10 and
0.25 IPH (inches per hour) precipitation rate.
b) The nozzles for spray
heads generally have somewhere between 1.35 and 2.15 IPH precipitation rate.
c) The nozzles for bubbler heads generally have somewhere between 2.50 and
20.00 IPH precipitation rate.
d) The emitters for drip/micro irrigation generally have somewhere between
0.25 and 1.50 IPH precipitation rate.
Thus, if you place a lower IPH head (let's say one rotor head at 0.20 IPH)
on a zone of higher IPH heads (let's say all of the spray heads are at 1.60
IPH), then you have created a dry spot in the area watered by the zone. This
means that you will have to run this irrigation zone longer to apply enough
water in the dry (rotor) spot. This also means that you are wasting money that has paid for all of the additional water being applied
by spray heads.
[In this example, you end up wasting or spending
eight times (1.60 divided by 0.20) the amount of water and money necessary.]
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The operating/running times of different
types (rotor, spray, drip, micro, etc.) of irrigation zones should be set at
different amounts of time at the controller.
Just taking a quick look at the general precipitation rates for the
different types of irrigation heads above should give you the idea that zone
operating/running times definitely need to be different. For example, an
irrigation zone of 0.20 IPH heads will obviously need to run longer than an
irrigation zone of 1.60 IPH heads.
There is really no mystery in figuring out the general operating/running
times for any type of irrigation zone. Simply find out what the irrigation
manufacturer indicates is the specific precipitation rate in IPH from their
own catalog, or figure out the average IPH precipitation rate in a zone if
necessary. Then divide this specific or average IPH precipitation rate by
what is considered the generally accepted amount of irrigation water, in
inches, that needs to be applied per week to maintain healthy plant material
growth in your area. (If you don't know this amount per week in inches,
contact your local county extension service. They should have a good idea
for your area. Still, in many parts of the U.S., the old rule-of-thumb of 1
inch of water a week is still used.)
Take the number you get after you divide the zone precipitation rate by your
locally accepted amount per week, and multiply it by 60. (For example: 0.20
IPH divided by 1 inch a week = 5, then take 5 times 60 = 300 minutes.) This
will give you the total minutes per week that you need to operate/run that
irrigation zone to apply your locally accepted amount of water. Now, divide
this number of minutes per week by the number of days per week you want to
irrigate to get your beginning daily operating/running time. (Again for this
example: 300 minutes divided by 4 days per week = 75 minutes a day.) Now all
you have to do is adjust this daily zone operating/running time for your
site's specific soil, seasonal evaporation and transpiration rates, etc.
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All spray and rotor irrigation head
zones should always have head-to-head coverage.
This means just what is says. The number of feet the manufacturer says is
maximum throwing distance (10 feet, 15 feet, 25 feet, 35 feet, etc.) for
that nozzle at your working pressure is the maximum distance between
heads/nozzles in your rotor or spray irrigation zone or system. You cannot
get away with using a greater distance between heads to save you design,
installation, operation or maintenance costs.
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Never adjust or reduce the throwing
distance of any spray or rotor nozzle by more than 25 percent of the
manufacturer's published/established throwing distance.
If a contractor or maintenance person adjusts or reduces the manufacturer's
own recommended maximum throwing distance of any spray or rotor nozzle by
more than 25 percent, the manufacturer has the legal right not to stand
behind or warranty the installation and use of their spray head or rotor.
Besides violating the manufacturer's published specifications, this
adjustment will produce an uneven precipitation/application of water and can
waste more water and money in just one year than it would cost to replace a
spray or rotor body and nozzle with the correct one's.
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Replace incorrectly matched
precipitation/application rate rotor nozzles within a rotor zone with the
properly matched nozzles.
Most so-called landscape and irrigation professionals incorrectly assume
that to water an entire area evenly with rotor heads they should use the
same litre per minute (LPM) nozzles in every rotor head. This is a big
mistake. Why do you think irrigation manufacturer's make all of those
different LPM nozzles?
You can save between 10 and 40 percent of the water used in a rotor
irrigation zone by proportionally matching the precipitation/application
rate of the rotor nozzles. For example, a rotor only covering a 1/3 circle
should have a nozzle installed in it that is roughly applying 1/3 of the LPM
that the nozzle in a full circle rotor in the same zone is applying.
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In spray irrigation zones, always use the
correct spray nozzle patterns for the area you are watering.
Truly knowledgeable landscape and irrigation professionals only purchase and
use the correct nozzle pattern and distance spray nozzles that they need for
the area. Using the incorrect pattern and throwing distance for just one
spray head can easily waste more water and money in just one year than it
would cost to replace the spray nozzle and body.
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Shrub and planter beds should always be
irrigated separately from grassed areas.
No matter where you are in the U.S., I am sure your local water management
district and/or county extension agent keeps telling you to irrigate grass
areas separately from your shrub and planter beds. They are correct.
Virtually all of your common local landscape plant materials (trees, shrubs
and ground covers) have vastly larger root systems than your local grass.
This means that your local landscape plant materials can generally exist on
roughly half of the amount of water you are putting on your local grass.
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Eliminate or reduce the amount of overspray
of both spray and rotor nozzles.
When a landscape or irrigation designer or maintenance person installs
and/or uses an irrigation head that throws water outside the landscaped area
(onto sidewalks, driveways, neighbour's property, etc.) just one single half
circle head could easily waste the same amount of water that there is in an
average spa or hot tub in just one year. Now, add up how many overspray
situations you have on a project and find out how many spas/hot tubs of
water you are wasting for your client in just one year.
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Eliminate the installation of spray and
rotor heads on PVC vertical risers within 6 feet of areas where people will
be as much as possible.
The few dollars you save by putting spray heads and rotors on PVC risers
next to sidewalks, driveways, pools, backyard play areas, etc., won't offset
the your legal liability and expenses if a person falls and impales
themselves on just one of these risers. If you think these types of
accidents and lawsuits don't happen, then you definitely need to have a long
talk with your insurance agent/company.
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Install or retrofit a rain shut off device
on an irrigation system.
The proper installation, setting and/or retrofitting of this relatively
inexpensive device will prevent an irrigation system from running during a
rainstorm or after adequate amounts of rain have fallen. These simple
devices generally pay for themselves in about one year. Depending on whom
you talk to, these rain shutoff devices can save between 3 and 15 percent of
the annual operating expenses of an irrigation system. In many parts of the
U.S., rain shutoff devices are required by law to be installed on all new
irrigation systems with hefty penalties for not installing them.
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Never run/operate the irrigation system
during the wrong part of the day.
I know you and your client probably like to run/operate the irrigation
system sometime during the daylight hours so that you can see that it is
functioning and find any irrigation problems. To me, this is about as
logical as using a lighted match to find out how much gasoline there is in a
gas tank.
Consider the following three problems associated with running/operating an
irrigation system sometime during daylight hours:
Every above ground irrigation system (rotors, sprays, micro-sprays, etc.)
has its watering patterns altered and/or distorted by wind, and when does
the wind generally blow the most? During daylight hours. The cost of
running/operating virtually every irrigation system during daylight hours
wastes water and money because the distorted patterns are throwing water
(item 8 over spraying, above) onto buildings, sidewalks, drives, etc.
(Besides, how much business do you think your clients are losing when their
clients have to walk through the overspray?)
The highest water evaporation rates for plant materials and grasses take
place during the daylight hours. If you run/operate an irrigation system
during the daylight hours, the water you apply doesn't generally have enough
time to soak into the root zone (or fall to the ground from the leaves) for
the plant materials to utilize before it evaporates.
If you run/operate most irrigation systems in the first part of the early
evening, then all the plant material goes to bed wet. Do you know how many
plant material fungal, disease, freeze, etc. maintenance problems are
created by plant materials going to bed wet? If you did, you would never
irrigate in the early evening hours.
There are many other problems associated with irrigating during daylight
hours besides the three mentioned above. However, just ponder the costs to
your clients in the three above.
The best way to irrigate a project is to work out a run/operation window in
the early dawn hours. This way water is not blown by the wind, it can seep
into the ground before the high evaporation rate times, your client's
clients are not inconvenienced by watering, and your fungal, disease, etc.,
maintenance costs are reduced.
Throughout the U.S., I have seen the aforementioned 11 common mistakes made
over and over and over again by landscape and/or irrigation contractors. If
you could correct these mistakes by educating your employees, you would be
surprised at how much you can actually reduce the costs that you charge your
clients, and how satisfied they end up being by correcting these common
mistakes.
The author is the owner of David Wickham &
Associates, Inc., Lake Mary, Florida.
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