OregonLuvr wrote:I will try Home Depot again early this morning as yesterday afternoon looked wild there, but I went in anyway but they didnt have what I wanted. It was so busy so after they didnt have several things I needed I didnt even go in the garden section for other stuff I wanted. Stopped at the grocery store and it was packed, not sure why as the sales dont start until today, I only picked up a couple of things and got the heck out of there. Came home, jumped on Amazon and ordered everything I needed for my drip system and my BBQ. It will be here tomorrow and Friday....easy peasy.
Good morning, Karen, and all who follow. VERY unseasonably cool here - we have yet to have our first 100 degree day - and I'll TAKE it! I really hate hot weather.
Karen, dang, I have been meaning to mention this but I forgot. Maybe if you are interested you can file it away for "later maybe".
I have been using this kind of drip system for going on four years now, and it is fantastic. The pieces are VERY easy to join using just hot water (to get the hose temporarily warm and flexible) and the best part is that the water emitters are built-in (no holes to punch, nothing to insert into the hose).
One just needs to get whatever hose they like (I use the 1/2") with one's preferred spacing of the emitters and a few "t's", elbows and end caps. There is nothing easier than this:
https://www.dripdepot.com/category/drip ... g-driplineMain website:
https://www.dripdepot.com/Best of all, they have multiple short videos showing how to put things together, and how to do just about whatever it is you need to do, garden-wise.
Shipping is free on orders over $49.00, shipping is fast and easy. They are located in Oregon!! Shipping to my No. Cal. home was just a few days.
Their products are available on Amazon, but are cheaper when purchased direct from the company.
I use a timer, one timer waters my whole large-ish garden. I love this, because I can be gone for a day or two or three and not worry about garden watering.
I also use "garden fabric" in my garden, this takes care of about 95% of the weeds - and I just leave it on the ground year after year:
https://www.amazon.com/ECOgardener-Landscape-Heavy-Duty-Eco-Friendly-Convenient/dp/B06WRQF1SQ?pd_rd_w=JcwHK&content-id=amzn1.sym.724fac2e-0491-4f7a-a10d-2221f9a8bc9a&pf_rd_p=724fac2e-0491-4f7a-a10d-2221f9a8bc9a&pf_rd_r=HSAKA905AKWFEPRHH1G7&pd_rd_wg=6zGlv&pd_rd_r=8d3482d0-6fb1Metal garden stakes are needed to hold this fabric close to the ground (these are well worth the price!):
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B073F1VMHS/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_search_asin_title?ie=UTF8&psc=1LOL. The way I get rid of most of my cardboard boxes (and I have a LOT of them, as many of us do these days!!) is that I break them down and put them flat on the ground, then cover them with this garden fabric, and stake things down. Easy-peasy!!
My drip system goes on top of the garden fabric.
The cardboard doesn't fill up the landfill, it further helps to suppress the weeds, it acts as a mulch holding in water, it adds organic matter to the soil, and it totally decomposes after several months (I have peeled up sections of my garden fabric to make adjustments, and the cardboard is
gone).
Win-Win!!
Yeah, yeah, I do understand that this isn't particularly eco-friendly - but without a drip system and this garden cloth I just couldn't do a garden anymore. It is so hot here in the summer my veggies need to be watered at least once - sometimes twice - per day. And my part of Northern California, with my rich river-loam soil is "Weed Paradise".
And, yes, the various bits are "pricy" but everything lasts several years - and harvesting organic produce from my back yard, year after year, more than makes up for the dollar investment.
Anne