xii. commercial landscape irrigation basics 1 dave dewolf – consultant

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1

XII. Commercial LandscapeIrrigation Basics

Dave DeWolf – Consultant

2

Lake County

Photo provided courtesy of Christie Cooper

3

WATER EFFICIENT LANDSCAPE

(AKA)

WEL GARDEN

4

WEL???

Photo provided courtesy of GardenSoft

5

WEL - Benefits

oEnvironmentoWater and air qualityoScreens noises/unpleasant sightsoRefuge for people and wildlifeoModerates temperature

6

WEL - ReduceoDaily & Seasonal peak water demandoGreen waste productionoRun-offoSoil erosionoHardscape damageo$$$$

7

Lake County WEL

Photo provided courtesy of Christie Cooper

8

What is a Water

Budget/Allocation?

9

Landscape Water Budget

Most commonAmount of water required to maintain a healthy

landscape Landscape Size (sq/ft) Water requirements of plants. Inches of precipitation per sq/foot of soil.

10

Landscape Water Budget

Result of a comprehensive Landscape/Irrigation Audit

Landscape observations Irrigation system evaluation Scientific calculations/Formulas

11

ObservationsWater source

ControllersSensors

Plant Material/ConditionDensity

Micro Climate(s)Soil

Sprinklers/Application DevicesMaintenance/Condition Issues

12

Water source

MetersPotable or ???

WellsPumps

13

Controllers

Manual ValvesManually Programmed

Smart ControllersSensors

14

Smart Water Irrigation Technologies(SWAT)

Climate Based Irrigation ControllersSoil Moisture Sensors

Weather Sensors

15

Signal, Weather and Web Based Controllers

Photo by RainBird

Photo by WeatherTrak

Photo by Weathermatic

Photo by RainBird

16

Soil Moisture Sensors

Photo courtesy of Irrometer

Photo courtesy of RainBird

17

Tensiometers

Washington State UniversityCooperative Ext., Pub#PW0475 James, GJ Principles of Farm ISD

John Wiley, 1988

IPM News. Michigan State University, Pascal Nzokou

18

Plant Material/Condition

What is being irrigated?How do the plants look?

What’s a WUCOLS?

19

Density Factor

Photo provided courtesy of Dave DeWolf

20

Low Density

Photos provided courtesy of GardenSoft

Medium Density

High Density

21

Micro ClimateWhat is constantly influencing the landscape?

Photo provided courtesy of GardenSoft

22

Soil

Soil Category / TextureSlope

CompactionStanding Water

23<Coarse Medium Fine >

Soil Texture

24

Saturation

25

Soil Moisture

Diagram provided by COMET UCAR

26

Irrigation SchedulingSandy / Coarse

Faster applicationLonger durationSchedule more

frequentlyLoam / Medium

Moderate applicationSchedule less often

Clay / FineShorter durationsMultiple start/stop

times

Image provided by www.dripdepot.com

Coarse Medium Fine

27

Sprinkler Type(s)How is the water getting to the plants?

Rotor

Spray

DripOR ???New Technology

28

Maintenance and Condition Issues

Photos provided by Dave DeWolf

29

Simple Fixes

Photos provided by Dave DeWolf

30

Irrigation Terminology

EvapotranspirationIrrigation Efficiency

Distribution UniformityPrecipitation Rate

Hydro-Zone

31

Water converted

from liquid to vapor

that does not pass

through the plant.

Evaporation

32

TranspirationWater passes from

soil Into plant root hairs

Up through the stemExits leaves into the

airDiagram provided by courtesy of COMET UCAR

33

EvapoTranspiration (ET)

Sum of water lost from Evaporation and water used

by plant Transpiration

34

Reference ET (ETo)

35

CIMIS – Station 13

36

WEATHER Solar radiation, air temperature, relative humidity, and wind speed

SOIL FACTORSSoil texture, structure andchemistry

PLANT FACTORSPlant type, root depth, density, height, and stage of growth

If, ETo = 0.25 inches/day (for July 15, 1985) and, Kc = 0.55 (for an orange tree in July) then, ETc = ETo x Kc = 0.25 inches/day x 0.55 = 0.1375 or 0.14 inches/day.

Transpiration RateETo Climate Indicators

37

Distribution Uniformity (DU)

Properly sized and matched sprinkler heads

Sprinkler spacing

Photo courtesy of El Dorado Irrigation District

38

Precipitation Rate (PR)

Rate that irrigation water is applied per unit of time Measured in inches per hour (in./hr.)

Photo courtesy of the Center for Irrigation Technology at California State University, Fresno

39

Irrigation Efficiency (IE)

Influenced by things you can and cannot control

Photo courtesy of Dave DeWolf

40

Hydro-Zone

Photo courtesy of GardenSoft

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