January-February 2009

SWAT Away Wasted Water

Traditional ways of irrigating crops are changing under the pressure of water scarcity as new technologies emerge.

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Photo: PureSense Pure Sense monitoring station powered by solar panel and battery backup

By Lyn Corum

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“You do save an awful lot of water,” says Water, of the Acclima system. He recently replaced a weather database system that had been in place for three to four years, with an Acclima controller at a winery in Napa, CA. The owner is now saving one million gallons of water annually.

These savings came after Water cleaned out the irrigation system a year ago, moving heads around to improve coverage, and reducing the number of controllers from six to four. Water usage plummeted from 8,000 gallons per day to 3,700 gallons per day during a period that included a 110˚F heat spell.

When he installed the Acclima system four to five months ago, he reduced the number of controllers further, to two. The owner told him the plants have never looked better.

John Paz is a grower-manager at Milano Flower Farm that grows cut flowers and cut greens in Carlsbad and Oceanside, CA. Cut greens are plants such as myrtle, boxwood, and ruscus. Paz installed one Acclima controller and six probes in October 2007 in the 325-acre Oceanside farm he manages. Over 20 types of plants are grown and all take different water requirements.

“The biggest thing we’ve learned is how to do leaching,” says Paz.

The well water is high in sodium, and he was increasing the amount of water to leach it out, but he wouldn’t see any increased moisture in the probes unless it rained heavily. The reason? Water was running off the fields. The effect on plants was burned leaves-something unacceptable in the cut flower and greens business.

Now he breaks up the watering and avoids runoffs. Salinity has dropped as a result. The water schedule was modified from six hours straight, to three hours in early mornings and three hours in late afternoon. “It’s a mindset about continuous watering,” he says. “This learning was due to the probe.”

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The next step for Paz and his colleagues is an experiment. They are adding three more probes in one field. One part of the field will get one percentage of water while another part of the field will get a different percentage of water, so they can determine how much water the plants actually require.

Horton says customers in Europe, South Africa, and Australia have installed the company’s technology. A new Italian distributor has sold 300 systems without technical support. The systems are very popular in Florida; in hot pockets in Michigan, Minnesota, Ohio, and Wisconsin; throughout the West; and in Texas.          

Author's Bio: CA-based, Lyn Corum is a technical writer, specializing in energy topics.

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