As those of you who keep up with the sidebar are aware, I have been back and forth between pillar and post pawing at the ground and procrastinating like crazy while thinking a lot about the irrigation system in my yard. Deciding that tackling the entire project all at once was creating this neurasthenia, I retrenched and regrouped and reorganized and rethought and when I ran out of re's to do and could put it off no longer I began to work on that raised bed.
You are seeing the
after photo. I am too embarrassed to share the
before shot, which demonstrated that the four walls and corner pieces create a handy dandy storage space for all the stuff I took out of the yard during the winter. Plastic and steel and bronze and roots and moss and stakes and poles and ties and it was a mess. Now, all that detritus is in a plastic storage container in the potting shed (aka the golf cart garage... but we don't play golf so I claimed it as my own) but at least it's out of sight. I've always admired gardeners who could put everything away every time .... I am definitely not of their ilk.
Once the space was clear, I pulled up the tubing and checked for leaks. There were none, but an
emitter was missing and water was gushing from a flailing piece of
1/4" tubing and I was wet. And laughing. Most definitely, I was laughing.
Learning from past failures, I decided to plant the cuttings I was rooting in plastic nursery pots into the raised bed itself. Yes, pots and all. You can see their edges in the photo. I know that I cannot rely on myself to be a consistent caregiver; I'm easily distracted and often forgetful and the smaller pots really suffer in this climate if they are ignored, or even just slighted, in the heat of June and July.
With the timer, though, I can rest comfortably knowing that, with fresh batteries installed, Tucson Metro Water and I will help these babies grow to be big and strong enough to survive in the yard itself. I was able to place the
drip tubing (which emits 1 gallon per hour through a one-every-18-inches-laser-cut-holes) so that each pot had its own personal private source of hydration.
If only I had manage to disentangle myself from the construction without separating the timer from its connecting sleeve, severing the plastic in a final and irreparable way.
As the Cuters can tell you, there is no help for broken plastic. When presented with a trampled truck, the second question, after "Can Daddooooo fix this???" was always "Is it plastic?" Because, as they well knew, Daddooooo could fix anything, except plastic.
It's a good thing that it rained today; I have a couple of days to replace the timer.
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Our yard 's irrigation system is a contractor's special. One emitter at the trunk of every tree, and the whole thing is on one timer. This makes it very hard to garden xeriscape-ly (hmmm.. I'm making up words again.)
The premise of xeriscape is the efficient use of the water resources available. Rainwater harvesting is part of it, and I'm happy to report that the berming I did in the courtyard
created an entirely new pathway for the water falling from the downspout onto the rip-rap (the rocks.... yes, they have a name.... ) to travel. Instead of seeping underneath the walkway, it moves towards the Siberian Iris which came with me from California and have been been languishing in their rocky home until the berm. Now just look at them, happy and green and smiley in the middle of the stream.
I love it when a plan comes together.
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