3 posts tagged “grass”
I called the guy who installed the full irrigation system in my garden and told him specifically that the problem I'm experiencing in the garden is due to the water finishing far too quick, much quicker than before. I have a huge water tank especially installed together with two pumps exclusively for the garden. The water tank's capacity is 2,500 liters so it should be more than enough to water the garden, but it wasn't lasting for more than 5 or 6 minutes (I kid you not!) and it would stop.
That sent me 'round the bend, something really drastic was happening here, and after even cursory examination I found that the problem is most probably because whenever the timer switched on the pump to water any sprinkler zone in the garden, the drip system comes on as well! Apart from the fact that that was destroying the flower beds' plants as they are receiving much more water than they bargained for (my timing is set for watering each garden zone twice a day, each zone is split into two sectors, and each sector receives 10 minutes of watering; the drip system itself is on twice a day as well for 10 minutes each and my watering regime is only at night and very early in the morning (before the sun comes up)) 50 minutes! The ground was turning a sick shade of green with all the mould and algae...
Anyway, I call the guy and he opens up the inspection hatch and I hear an "aha!" I thought: brilliant! the bastard already found the problem! And he did, he said that the valve was stuck in the open position all the time. YES! He closed it and said that should fix the problem and was about to go on his merry way. Hold on a minute, I'm not done with you yet! What if it happens again? Why did it happen in the first place? How do I fix it if it does recurr? "Don't worry sir, it won't happen again."
Yeah sure... off he goes with my thanks.
The next day it got stuck once again and I called him back immediately. I make sure that I am right there to monitor what they're doing. This time, I told him to disassemble the valve and see exactly what the hell is going on. No questions. So he reluctantly did... and found a spring that was making the valve stuck open! That spring was exercised a bit and the internals cleaned, and finally it only came on when commanded at the proper time.
Now I can finally set the proper timing to water the lawn, and I did after much trial and error (this is actually where my phone, the Sony Ericsson K750i came into its own as it had a stopwatch for me to time the operation!) I got the water tank to pump enough water into two sectors before finishing, and allow enough time between waterings for the tank to refill from the measly pressure we get from the government line.
Maybe now I can really start correcting that drought period of a couple of weeks that wreaked havoc on my lawn, I've got great big brown patches to rectify now... it will take some work, but I'm up for it.
I think I found out why my irrigation system is so screwy of late... it looks like that the drip system valve is stuck open, so anytime the pump is on regardless of which zone, it pumps water through the drip system as well. Needless to say that utilises an awful lot of water, hence the tank of 5,000 liters finish in less than 10 minutes, leaving two halves of two zones bone dry.
I think there is nothing really as nice as a good, well maintained, lush, lawn. I see this and I just want to sit on the grass for a while or lie down on it and just chill out.
Alternately, there is nothing worse than a patchy lawn. It is ugly and eyesore
. It just robs the whole garden of it's niceness.This is unfortunately what has happened to my garden lately, and I think I solved it: that part of the lawn was starved of water! And I think it is a malfunctioning solenoid or a blockage in the main line or something of the sort. That zone receives the same pressure as all the other zones, but when the pump is on, the risers hardly break the surface and just lethargically dribble water rather than really spray it out and cover its circle. I just assumed that the pressure was as good as the other zones; in fact I reduced the pump's pressure last week as I thought the other zones' pressure was just too high.
This afternoon I thought I would really investigate so I donned my swimming trunks and switched the pump on. I was armed with a screwdriver and pliers just in case they are needed "in the field"; however, they weren't. The reason, as stated above, was plain to see. I went and increased the pump's pressure appreciably and will monitor all zones through the coming week to see if there is any difference. I'm sure there will be... I am determined to get my lovely lawn back.
