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-   -   Magic Water Wand (Tomato Plants) (http://www.tomatoville.com/showthread.php?t=26806)

Durgan March 1, 2013 08:00 AM

Magic Water Wand (Tomato Plants)
 
[url]http://www.durgan.org/URL/?LXROX[/url] 14 July 2012 Magic Water Wand (Tomato Plants)
Thirty two plants were watered thoroughly using the MAGIC WATER WAND.The wand was inserted about ten inches from the stalk in three places around the plant. Total time to water 30 minutes. This should be sufficient for a week or ten days.The area is suffering from a severe drought.

[url]http://durgan.org/URL/?ARLGN[/url] 28 May 2009 Watering Plant Roots.The MAGIC WATER WAND.
This method gets water to the root area of the plants. The hydraulic effect of the water makes pushing the wand into the ground effortless. The device is made by cutting off the end of a typical water garden wand as sold in most hardware stores.

meatburner March 3, 2013 05:54 PM

Durgan, do you have a pic of the wand setup out of the ground. I would like to see how you put it together. Not sure what you put in the ground. Thanks so much.

Durgan March 3, 2013 06:30 PM

[QUOTE=meatburner;331594]Durgan, do you have a pic of the wand setup out of the ground. I would like to see how you put it together. Not sure what you put in the ground. Thanks so much.[/QUOTE]

The fourth picture. Just the end of the pipe is pushed into the ground.

habitat_gardener March 4, 2013 12:53 AM

32 plants in 30 minutes, 3 holes per plant ... so you put the wand in the ground for <20 seconds each time? And you turn it off in-between? (if not, how do you keep from making furrows in the soil?)

I have a headless Dramm wand (got on freecycle) and bought a screw-on head for it. But I guess pushing it into the ground would ruin the threads and it'd be cheaper to use a cut-off generic one.

Durgan March 4, 2013 01:03 AM

No furrows, simply lift the wand. It is really a quick operation. The bit of hole made made also aerates a little. Sometimes I kick a bit of soil or wood chips from the mulching into the hole if too obvious.

Doug9345 March 4, 2013 09:36 AM

I just might make one, but I'd make it a lot longer so that I don't have to bend over every time. I'd also put one of those in line shut offs on it so I could move it around without soaking myself.

There is a lot of options as to what to make it out of. I think I might use some metal electrical conduit because I have it. After bending it and cut if off to the right length, I'd use a short piece of hose to connect it to a female hose coupling and be good to go.


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