Gauteng Smallholder April 2016 | Page 18

IRRIGATION From page 15 they are to water. Properly positioned, therefore, driplines deliver a measurable amount of water directly to the base of each plant, with no loss of water through misting and spray or, if the flow is slow enough, through run-off. The only maintenance necessary in a dripline system is a periodic check to see that the delivery holes are not blocked. Even plantings of annual crops, particularly of larger plants spaced some distance apart, such as tomatoes, can be irrigated using driplines, with the added advantage that the system will benefit plants (such as tomatoes) that are prone to leaf mould and mildew if they have their leaves wetted. A further advantage of dripline irrigation is that it can be achieved using very low water pressure. In some cases the pressure achieved merely by mounting a tank on a tank stand will be sufficient. Thus, dripline irrigation becomes possible for smallholders without electricity or who Microjet irrigation in an orchard cannot afford booster sprayers, pumps become pumps. essential because the The moment some kind of pressures required are very spray is involved, either in the much higher. form of microjets, rotary Microjets, like driplines, can impact sprayers, or cannon be used to water individual plants. They will usually be in a permanent irrigation system and the little spray heads can be found in various spray configurations and spray o angles, from 90 (for corners o of beds,) 180 (for watering on only one side of a path) o and 360 (for watering in the middle of a bed). If your water supply is in any way contaminated, with fine sand or plant material (including algae) it is essential to install an inline sieve or filter in the system to save yourself from spending hours unblocking clogged microjet heads. A further disadvantage of microjet irrigation is the considerable amount of water that is lost in spray mist, particularly when the system is run on a windy day. Plus, of course, the fact that the entire plant, and bed, is soaked is disadvantageous to plants that prefer their leaves and stems to remain dry. Rotary sprayers come in many types, from pop-ups typically found in permanent garden irrigation systems where the pressure in the pipework causes the sprinkler head to pop up out of a hole in the ground to do its job and which, on completion of its task, falls back into its hole. In this way pop-ups are great when laid in a lawn as they allow mowers to do their job unhindered by either having to move pipework or sprinklers or having to work around protruding irrigation Continued on page 17 16 www.sasmallholder.co.za