Russet potato grown with no supplemental watering in woodchips
Do you want to reduce how much you water your garden?
Do you wish you could water your garden less? Even if you enjoy watering I'm sure there are other
gardening tasks you could do with the time you would save. Or just sit back, relax, and observe the abundance of your awesome low water garden.
In my blog post
5 Ways to Transform Your Garden into a Low Water Garden I cover 5 methods you can use to work with nature so nature does the watering for you.
The methods are:
- Stop tilling your soil
-
Garden with perennials
- Use
mulch
- Block summer winds
- Create late-afternoon shade
In this post I'm going to discuss 1 of these methods and also talk about how soil holds water.
One method the blog post does not talk about is creating what is known as a
hugelkulture bed (buried wood beds). These are great for reducing your water needs but for this post I'm focusing on what you can do to make an existing garden a low water garden.
You might be saying to yourself - Daron you live in the rainy Pacific Northwest, of course you don't need to water! It is true it rains a lot here but it all comes in the fall/winter. In 2018 over the course of May, June, July, August, and September my homestead got less than 1.5 inches of rain.
Despite only getting 1.5 inches of rain over 5 months, I only watered my garden twice in May just to get seedlings established. Otherwise I never watered and still got great harvests including those potatoes in the top pic.
If you live in a hotter and drier region you may not be able to stop watering but you can still reduce the amount of watering your garden needs by using these methods.
Are you ready to learn how to start transforming your garden into a low water garden? Let's get started!
Storing Water in the Soil
Healthy soil contains
organic matter,
(pieces of dead plants and animals, plus the millions of microbes, fungal networks, and bacteria that thrive in healthy soil) that increase the water-holding capacity of the soil. According to the
US Department of Agriculture (USDA), every 1% increase in organic matter results in as much as 25,000 gallons of available water per
acre.
So how does that translate to your garden?
It roughly means that for every 1% increase in organic matter in your soil you get the equivalent of 1 week of recommend watering
(1" of water over the surface of your garden tends to be the go to recommendation).
If your soil had 4% organic matter you would have a full month worth of water stored in the soil! That is awesome!
These are rough numbers, but I'm using them to give you an idea of how much benefit you can get from increasing the organic matter content of your soil.
The key for the methods I outline in my blog post is to increase the organic content of your soil
(no-till, and mulch), reduce the amount of water needed
(Garden with perennials), and reduce evaporation of water from the soil
(block summer winds, create late-afternoon shade).
Block Summer Winds
My new hedgerow during its first year that will one day be 15 feet tall providing privacy, wildlife habitat and block the summer winds.
Air moving over your garden can dramatically increase how fast your soil dries out. It is the same reason that a hair drier works so well - the heat is part of it but the moving air is critical.
Great for drying your hair, but bad for your garden.
But you can block at least some of the wind if you plant taller plants as a screen around your garden. If you are worried about getting too much shade from the screen then just move it further away from your garden. If you plant in the right spot, the summer sun is high enough that it will still reach your garden but the winds will be deflected up and over the garden.
To help figure out how far away the wind screen
should be planted I recommend using this free tool:
SunCalc.org
You can use SunCalc to figure out how far a shadow will reach for any object
(just enter the height in meters) for any day and time. Makes it really easy to plan where to plant your wind screen or where to put a green house to make sure you still get winter sun.
There is also an app version you can download for you phone but I have not tried it yet.
You might be wondering what should you plant in your wind screen?
There are multiple options depending on what you like the best. You could go with a bunch of semi-dwarf
fruit trees with some shrubs at the base to get a nice full screen. I decided to plant a bunch of native shrubs and trees that will get no taller than 20 feet to form a nice wind screen.
The
native plants will also support a wide range of beneficial insects and birds that will help keep
pests down in my garden.
Another option is to plant some taller vegetables like
orach or climbing beans in the beds that the winds tend to hit first. These would also function as a wind screen though not quite as effective as planting trees or shrubs.
What ideas for wind screens do you have? Leave a comment below with what you would plant in a wind screen around your garden.
What Do You Think?
This young hedgerow is planted on the west side of my property. It will provide privacy and late-afternoon shade once it grows taller.
I would love to hear from you! Please leave a comment in this
thread and don't forget to
check out my blog post that this thread was based on. If you are one of the first to leave a comment you might even get a surprise in the form of
pie or apples
The blog post covers the other 4 methods I mentioned in this post to help you reduce the amount of watering your garden needs. There is also a cheat-sheet you can signup to get on the blog to help you get started today.
Thank you!