Drip System- The best irrigation system for most plants


I want to show you what system I use in my garden for irrigation and why I think it is the best around. Before that, I want to mention that drip systems that you buy in stores are worthless, in my opinion, because the ones with just the holes in the tubes are cheaper, but they get clogged really easy, they don’t water evenly and sometimes even spray all over. Also, if you choose a hard PVC pipe system and then drill holes in it, that may work, but again you can’t control the flow of water, which is paramount to irrigation.

I have ordered a new one this year that seems close to my hand built system by Toro. I will see how it does.

So here is the system. I buy really thin and cheap 1/2 tubing from Walmart, made by Orbit, and the necessary fittings to attach to my hose etc. The pipe is less than $5.00 for 50ft and the fittings are a little more than $1 a piece.

The thin pipe is really nice because I then poke pressure regulating emitters into it with ease. The emitters are made by Rainbird. I use the 2.0 GPH emitters. This means that each emitter will deliver 2 gallons per hour no matter the change in pressure. Here are the emitters.

Rainbird 2.0 GPH emitters

I buy these at a plumbing supply house and they will range between $.35 to $.75 a piece depending on where you go or what type of an account you have. This can get expensive for a larger garden, however, you should only have to make this purchase once and you will save money in the long run with not having to replace bad systems or poor plants due to improper irrigation.

So once I have the pipe, I poke the emitters in one every foot. At the end of the hose you just crimp it over and wrap electrical tape. This will save money on buying caps for the end of the hose. It will also allow you to open up the hose at the beginning of the new season and clean out the hose by running water in it with the end open.

When you have the length you want then just lay it down the row with the emitters laying sideways.

Some rows may require one length down and one back for even watering. I would suggest this for rows with plants on either side of the row or plants with large root systems like squash, cucumbers, raspberries etc. Here is an example of a run down my soon to be strawberry patch.

Irrigation pipe running to my raspberries

You will notice a couple of other things going on here from this picture. First, you want to have a 3/4″ filter (about $10 at plumbing supply house) at the beginning of the system. This will ensure a long life for your emitters so that junk doesn’t clog them up. Note that the filter is 3/4″ NPT thread which is different than regular hose thread. Therefore, you will need to my a 3/4″ female hose thread by 3/4″ Female NPT adapter for both sides of the filter.

You will also see some PVC pipe running off my system. This is for my raspberries at the other end of the garden. At the end of this PVC hose I have a valve and then another drip system running down that row.

Now for your manifold system. You will want to be able to control water going in each row in case they are on different watering schedules. In order to do this I cut up a cheap hose and add ends to each length.

Between each length is a wye with valve controls (about $1 each at walmart). Click here for examples. I continue on the run with one side of the wye and the add another wye to the other end. I will run two rows off of each wye. This allows full control over each row. Note on the wyes. They 20-30% of them will break each year. You can choose to spend $5 a piece on the really nice ones or just replace them as they break. I just replace them.

Now whenever you need to water your garden you just hook up your hose to the filter end and turn on the rows that need to be watered.

I water plants for about 2 hours each watering sessions. 2.5 hours for those that require water less frequently but deeply. This is assuming a 2 GPH rate of flow.

A quick primer on watering. I have water loving crops (lettuce, strawberries, onions, carrots, peas etc.) which I water twice a week using this system. I have summer crops (squash, cucumbers, corn, beans, peppers etc.) that I water once a week. And then there are the vine crops like tomatoes and melons that only need water once every two weeks.

Water deeply, not frequently. Note: when germinating seeds I keep the ground moist always. Therefore, I will water everyday for about 15 minutes until the plants are up. I will use a rainbird type sprinkler for this for speed unless there are other plants in the garden.

Now, why is this system preferable to other methods?

  • Mulching- This system allows you to use a black plastic or organic mulch system. I put black plastic under all the plants I can so I don’t have to weed and the moisture doesn’t evaporate, except through the plants. Vine crops love the heat of black plastic.
  • Diseases- If you water plants on the top and the leaves get wet then you invite fungal diseases to set on your plants. The longer the leaves are wet, the more likely the disease.
  • Water conservation- Drip irrigation puts the water right where the plants need it. This saves water and your money by not watering empty space or the air.
  • Simplicity- This system is easy to operate. Of course you have to build it the first time, but then when you need to water once or twice a week you just connect a hose and walk away (I would get a timer since you can forget about it). Watering in furrows is a pretty good system, except that you have to keep moving the water etc. That is why this is better.

I hesitate to say that you will get better yields on this system, but I believe I do. I will just stop it at that.

Special thanks to Dr. Gordon Wells of Spanish Fork, UT for teaching me this system.

Update: Here a closeup of the wye configuration



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Reader Comments

Hi Alex,
Do you use the filter with the pressure regulater built into it or do you regulate the pressure with your wye valves? If you do regulate the pressure through the wye valves, is it pretty easy to maintain the correct pressure usng the valves? Have you used any other emitters besides Rainbird? There are other brands that are also pressure regulated 2 GPH that are quite a bit cheaper online, so I was wondering if they would work?

Thanks,

Brett

The filter at the beginning of the line is just to ensure that the valves don’t get clogged up, there is no pressure regulation. I do not regulate pressure at all. I turn on the faucet and wye valves full blast and let the emitters do the job. I have other types emitters on my grapes and such and they seem to do just fine. I will admit that the Rainbirds are probably the high end of emitters. I wanted to spend the money up front and have a long lasting system. As you pointed out, there are much cheaper systems out there. I would recommend checking out dripirrigation.com for a number of different options. In fact, if you have a tight budget I would recommend drip tape. You will lose longevity, but they will work just fine.

I wonder if you have lower water pressure where you are, because the emitters recommended PSI is 30 PSI. In West Jordan, where I live, the PSI is around 90 PSI. Do you know what your PSI is? You mentioned that you control what you water with the wye valves, what are the most and least emitters you run at one time with your water pressure? The guys at the sprinkler supply shop said I need to have the pressure regulator, but I know Gordon Wells uses the wye valves to contol the pressure and yours is works without it as well. If I can avoid buying the filters with the pressure regulator that would save quite a bit of money with my set up.

Thanks,

Brett

Just wondering, do you run drip hose down both sides of a row of corn or is one hose down the middle of the row sufficient?

The pressure is high, but I almost always run multiple tubes/rows at a time. I run about 4-5 15ft hose lengths, many of which run up and back. The least amount would be about 60ft of hose with 50+ emitters at a time. Normally, I barely have enough pressure in the line with all the emitters. I would guess that I would have about 80-100 emitters going at a time on average. I would imagine if you only had one row with 15 emitters then you would need to regulate the pressure, but I would just do that at the faucet instead of spending money on a pressure regulator.

I run it down both sides since it is a 3ft row and the corn has a fairly large root system. One line would be sufficient but you would have to leave the water on a long time and punch in emitters at least every 12 inches. I believe you would have better success with it going down and back.

I can’t seem to figure out how you are hooking your wye valves to the sections of hose. Is there a special type of T valve you are using? Or is it a double wye?

I added a picture of my wye set up to the end of this post. Hopefully that helps. If not, shoot over another comment and I will try to answer.

Alex