I fully acknowledge I am a plant lady. It’s the first idea
Mr. JCrew comes up with for a gift for me. I won’t turn down a plant. You can
never have too many. I love to care for plants and talk to them.
I especially love plants in pots. Containers give height to
a garden and softens the structure of a porch.
But with containers, means more attention. Because they
don’t have the ground for their roots to spread in search of water, they have to
be watered more often than plants in the ground.
My collection of potted plants outside kept growing. I loved
the look of a mass of different sized pots. Watering became a chore. I’d refill several watering cans.
In the window box outside of Mr. Pfitzer’s room, I left a
watering can in his bathroom to use. We just took out one of the screens to
access the pots. Watering through the screen did not work.
But it was when I came home from giving birth to Mr. Pfitzer
at the hospital that I knew I needed to do something to help water my plants.
My short time away, the plants in the windowbox had died. I looked into getting
a “Plant Sitter” but it did not work.
The water was not leaving the reservoir and my plants were
dry.
I then tried the plant sitter on a larger scale and bought
apple juice in glass bottles (instead of buying empty glass bottles). Once we
drank the apple juice, I’d fill the glass bottle with water and put a tube in
it. The tubing was not long enough, but it also was just too slow.
I even tried braiding scrap fabric and stuck it in the dirt
for the water to travel up and into the dirt. This also did not work.
I finally researched drip irrigation. One of my friends from
church had explained how her husband hooked up a system to water her plants in
her window box. It sounded so cool!
I started saving things to my Amazon Wish List. I started
the planning/design process and calculating the cost of all that I would need.
I then looked at HomeDepot and saw that they carried a lot
of what I needed. I bought my tubing and sprinkler heads from them.
I used many types of sprinkler heads. I had many different
size pots that would be on the same system. My larger pots had two sprinkler
heads in them, and the water would need to be on longer in order for them to
receive enough water. But a smaller pot would be on the same amount of time as
the larger one, but I could use a lower-flow sprinkler head to make sure it was
not over-watered.
The smaller pots use a drip sprinkler head.
The larger pots use a fan sprinkler head. There are many
types of fan heads.
There is one main line that runs from the faucet. But off
the large tube, a smaller tube is connected that runs to the pot.
I use elbow connectors to get my large tubing to take
corners.
I use T-shape connectors to split tubing to go two different
directions. When the big tubing coming from the faucet reaches the ground, I
have some of it go to the front porch and some of it go to the back porch.
I buried my tubing in flowerbeds.
I tried to make it minimal what tubing was showing, but it's not bad. I have gotten use to it and don't notice the tubing.
I checked the connections of tubing and sprayed it with the
flex seal stuff to seal any little holes.
The large tubing connects to the faucet using a fancy
adapter.
I tried to get fancy and use a timer on my faucets, but I
just couldn’t get those to work right. I’d love for it to run itself!
Right now, all I have to do is go outside; turn on two
faucets; sit on the porch for ten minutes; then turn the water faucets off.
Watering is done!
Now, there is one change I wish could be made to the
sprinkler heads. I wish they would rotate while spraying. They currently are
stationary. The water then goes in the same spot. I’m not certain but I think
water is wasted this way. I turn on my faucet for ten minutes, but within 3
minutes, I am already seeing a flood of water leaving the bottom of my pots.
Once that little area where the tiny spot of water goes down, there is extra
water just going right through the pot instead of reaching the spaces in
between.
At first, I only had two sprinkler heads for the large pots.
But like I mentioned, they don’t rotate, so some plants were not getting water.
About once a week, I would take the hose out and give the pots a good watering.
The drip irrigation was a time saver for in between the hose watering. I really
wanted to make the drip irrigation work for me fully, so I bought more
sprinkler heads and designated one sprinkler per plant. You can change the flow
on the heads, so that helped.
In my large pots out back, there are three plants per pot.
In my large pots up front, I have five plants per pot.
I was nervous to put too many heads on the line because it
would impact the flow. Having one head per plant, the flow did not matter as
much. But I am happy to report, adding more sprinklers, the impact to the flow
was minimal.
It is a time saver and I’m so glad I did it. I turn on the
faucet, sit on the porch for a couple minutes, then turn the faucet off. So
easy!
When I saw my new sprinkler controller had an option to handle drip irrigation, it got me considering connecting my drip irrigation as a new zone to my sprinkler system and letting the controller handle it! That research is ongoing and I will let you know when I tackle it!
Items I used:
Your sprinkler head comes with a coupler attached, so you do not need to purchase those separately.

















































