yoderjac
5 year old buck +
I just planted 3 Jujube trees as an experiment. These require regular watering for the first year until established and are then pretty drought resistant. Unfortunately, they are not near a water source and any water will need to be transported to them.
I decided to try something. I bought 10' soaker hoses and wrapped them around the drip line before mulching over top. I threaded the end of the hose outside the protective fencing. I then bought some plumbing hardware so I could connect the hose to the bottom of 5 gal buckets. I plan to sit the bucket up on some blocks on the up hill side of each tree and connect the soaker hose to it.
I will then just fill 5 gal buckets with water back at my barn and put them in my loader or on my ATV for transport. When I get to the field, I'll pour the water from the transport bucket to the bucket connected to the soaker hose.
Question: Will gravity be enough to water the tree through the soaker hose or does a soaker hose require more pressure?
Thanks,
Jack
I'm not sure I know the answer regarding the soaker hose Jack but I am curious where you got your Jujube trees and even more so how they do for you. (INTERNAL IMAGE LIKE EMOTICON REMOVED)
One other option you could look at are these. I bought 2 of these as an experiment for 2 apple trees i'm putting in. It's not always easy to get to my property to take care of things so i'm giving them a whirl. Stuart had pointed these out to me.
http://www.benmeadows.com/search/Ooz...88/?type=brand
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More info
http://www.treecamel.com/faq.htm
Sure hope those work Ed - my two will be getting "deployed" soon.
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Originally Posted by Lickcreek
I'm not sure I know the answer regarding the soaker hose Jack but I am curious where you got your Jujube trees and even more so how they do for you. (INTERNAL IMAGE LIKE EMOTICON REMOVED)
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I bought three of them this spring as an experiment. I got them from <http://www.justfruitsandexotics.com
I was specifically looking for an improved variety with fruit dropping characteristics compatible with deer hunting in my area that are grown on their own roots verses grafted on native root stock. Just Fruits was the only place I could find them. The variety I selected was Tigertooth. I just planted them last Sunday. I will report back as they grow and let you know how they do and when they fruit.
If these survive, I'll likely add a half dozen or so more next spring. If the productivity, deer use, and maintenance is as predicted, in a few years, I'll try to incorporate this more fully into my QDM.
Thanks,
Jack
Pretty neat deals! Curious how they work out! (INTERNAL IMAGE LIKE EMOTICON REMOVED)
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. I will report back as they grow and let you know how they do and when they fruit
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Keep us posted!
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Originally Posted by CrazyED
One other option you could look at are these. I bought 2 of these as an experiment for 2 apple trees i'm putting in. It's not always easy to get to my property to take care of things so i'm giving them a whirl. Stuart had pointed these out to me.
http://www.benmeadows.com/search/Ooz...88/?type=brand
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More info
http://www.treecamel.com/faq.htm
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Thanks! That is an interesting approach. Does anyone else have experience with these that you could share?
Thanks,
Jack
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Originally Posted by smsmith
Sure hope those work Ed - my two will be getting "deployed" soon.
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Me too, and if they don't no big deal. They're cheap enough, well worth the gamble IMO. I think the biggest trick will be filling them. I'm hoping I can take them up to the house, fill them and drag them back out full inside this otter sled(ice fishing sled) we have. Otherwise I guess I might have to fill up some large 10 gallon tanks we have and take the water out to fill. I'm not really sure yet. I really need to pull those things out of the box and figure out a plan I guess!
OH well should be fun. I was up in Marquette County last weekend and the weather was great. We planted a few cedar trees and did hit a few few spots with frost still in the ground but that should be gone this week! Happy Planting!
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Originally Posted by yoderj@cox.net
Question: Will gravity be enough to water the tree through the soaker hose or does a soaker hose require more pressure?
Thanks,
Jack
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If your talking about the black soaker hose made from recycled rubber then yes they need pressure to work correctly. We use them sometimes in the garden. For berries we use black roll pipe and punch-in drip nozzles....those need pressure but not very much....think I have 25 psi regulators on the system.
For a few trees here is an idea. Get a pack of the 'adjustable volume' drip nozzles from lowes...they are little black things and the cap screws or unscrews to regulate flow...like $2-4 for a 4 or 6 pack...other end is a short hose barb for installing into roll irrigation pipe. Take a 5 gal bucket and drill a small hole on the side and near the bottom...just big enough for the nozzle to 'pop in'....use marine grade silicone to seal around the nozzle and hole. Place buckets near trees and adjust the nozzle to get desired drip rate....prolly 1-2 drops per min would be fine...whatever it takes to give you desired soil moisture around tree. Then just re-fill the buckets at whatever interval..1 week two weeks etc. Should work good for you! (INTERNAL IMAGE LIKE EMOTICON REMOVED)
Here is a pic of the nozzle. This one is used on the end of a tygon tube to control flow rate on a weed wiper.
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Crazy Ed has the right idea. I'm a general contractor and when my landscapers plant bigger trees in areas that don't receive irrigation they use similar bag setups. I would recommend calling a landscaper you know and ask him to get you a few bags. There are a ton of different types but they all do the same thing. The good thing is, you only have to fill them up every other week or so depending on the amount of rain.