It is no secret that we are in the middle of a major drought and an historic heat wave. Our landscape plants need water to survive the heat and drought. Here are some things we at Royal Creations Architectural Landscaping suggest to keep your plants and landscapes in good condition this summer.
Trees
Trees add the most value to a landscape of any plant. They take the longest to grow, too. Many trees do not show drought stress until they are already in trouble, so you may not see signs your tree is hurting now. They are definitely stressed between the extreme heat and the drought. Trees use water to cool themselves and will literally cook without an adequate supply of water.
Younger trees that have been planted in the last three years are especially at risk. To prevent that, make sure to water your trees thoroughly. Trees need two to three gallons of water per inch of trunk diameter two to three times a week during their first three years. During a drought, they can survive on one to two inches of water two or three times a week to get them through the summer to the fall.
Established trees should be watered deeply with two to three inches per inch of trunk diameter, especially when they show drought stress. These signs include dropping or wilting leaves, small or malformed leaves, yellowing of the leaves, and browning tips of the leaves. Always water in the morning before ten if possible so they dry out by nightfall. This helps prevent fungus and other diseases.
Foundation
We have clay soil that can become a hard, impervious rock during the summer when there is little rain. Your soil will pull away from your foundation when it shrinks in the heat. When it does rain, the cracks between your soil and your foundation fill up and can cause damage and flooding. To prevent this, water around your foundation during the summer. Running your sprinklers twice a week early in the morning will keep your soil moist and protect your house from problems.
Check Irrigation
Speaking of sprinklers, have you checked to make sure all your sprinkler heads are working properly? A busted head can cause a problem anytime. During a drought, you risk plants dying around a head that no longer emits enough water or even erosion problems from concentrated water flow in a specific area. Most homeowners typically check their sprinkler system in the spring when it is turned on and again in late fall when it is turned off. We suggest adding at least one to three summer checks of your system. Ideally, you would check it once a month to ensure the heads are functioning properly and the program schedule fits the climate conditions. If you can’t do it monthly, then maybe a few times during the hottest and driest seasons will make a big difference to the health of your landscape and turf.
We Can Help
Royal Creations Architectural Landscaping can connect you with irrigation specialists that can come and check your system this summer. They can repair any problems with the system, so you are sure all your plants and your foundation are getting the water they need to survive the summer and the drought. Call us at (816) 825-2524 to get help managing your landscape this summer.
Summers are becoming increasingly hot and that is hard on our plants. This article discusses some ways you can increase your plant’s chances of survival by the way you water them.
Three Ways to Water
There are three ways to water your plants during the summer. Watering is best done between 5 a.m. -10:00 a.m. This allows the leaves of the plant to dry before nightfall, decreasing problems with diseases on your plant.
Hand Watering
Watering by hand with a hose is the best way to water your plants in the summer. You can direct the water right to the root zone of the plant. Watering by hand three times a week during the hot weather is the best way to keep your plants alive. Plants in containers need to be watered once a day. However, if you have a large landscape, watering by hand can be time-consuming.
Drip Irrigation
If you don’t have time to water your plants by hand, installing drip irrigation is the next best thing. The water goes directly to the roots of each plant. There are no splashes to wet the leaves or splash soil on them. You can put your drip irrigation on a timer and forget about it. One problem is that the emitters can get clogged. Since drip irrigation is typically covered with mulch, you may not realize there is a problem until your plants start to wilt, turn yellow or brown, or die.
Pop-Up Sprinklers
Pop-up sprinklers do not clog and may be better if you do not have time to monitor your irrigation system on a regular basis. Pop-up sprinklers do lose some of the water they put out to evaporation. They also get the foliage wet, increasing the possibility that a fungal disease can attack your plant. Watering in the morning so the foliage dries before nightfall will help stop fungal diseases from moving in.
Conserving Water
One only has to look at states to the South and West of us to see what happens when the water runs out. Conserving water not only saves you money but also makes sure you have the water you need in the future.
Irrigation Audits
Irrigation audits are usually done in the spring when your system is set up to run after being drained all winter. However, they can be performed any time the system is in use. There are three parts to an irrigation audit.
Site Inspection –walk your landscape and notice any sunken heads, heads that have been damaged by lawn equipment, or have become misaligned. Replace the bad sprinkler heads and realign them to avoid hardscape areas.
Performance Testing –Run the sprinkler system briefly by zone and mark all the sprinklers. Take small containers and scatter them so that each sprinkler in zone 1 has a container in the area that the sprinkler serves. Run the sprinkler zone 1 for ten minutes. Measure the amount of water each sprinkler put into the containers. If there are sprinkler heads that do not produce the amount of water they should replace them. Repeat for every zone in your landscape.
Irrigation Scheduling –Now that you know how much water your sprinklers put out by zone, you can schedule your sprinkler system for only the length of time those sprinklers need to water the plants in that zone.
Mulch
Putting down at least three inches of mulch around your plants will help them survive the summer. The mulch helps keep the soil cooler. Mulch also absorbs water and gradually releases it, giving your plants the water they need slowly, so it doesn’t just run off or evaporate. Mulch also controls weeds, which steal water, nutrients, and light from your plants.
Native Plants
Native plants evolved to survive in this climate. All plants need to be watered frequently when getting established. However, after the plants get established, the native ones do not need supplemental irrigation for all but the driest years. There are many beautiful annuals, perennials, shrubs, and trees you can choose from.
We Can Help
Watering a landscape can be time-consuming. Auditing your irrigation system can also be time-consuming and frustrating if you have to replace several sprinkler heads and figure out the optimal time to water in each zone.
Royal Creations Architectural Landscaping can help you water properly and keep your plants alive this summer. We install both pop-up sprinklers and drip irrigation and can configure them to give just the right amount of water for each plant. We also do irrigation audits on existing systems to keep them delivering water to your landscape, and not your sidewalk. If you are interested in what we can do to water your plants properly and keep them alive this summer, just schedule a consultation today.