Whizbang Bucket Irrigation For Gardeners

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  • čas přidán 2. 07. 2024
  • It's a simple, efficient, and inexpensive way to drip-irrigate (and fertigate) your garden plantings. Brought to you by Herrick Kimball. You can check out all of Herrick's books and products for gardeners at this link: www.planetwhizbang.com/gardening
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Komentáře • 187

  • @herrickkimball
    @herrickkimball  Před 6 lety +16

    Some viewers are confused by this video. Let me clarify... Whizbang bucket irrigation is a simple, hassle-free, low-tech approach to spot-irrigating (or fertigating) individual plantings. It is a tool for deep-watering with a slow, steady trickle of water. Although I illustrate this tool by watering a row of strawberries, I do not typically water rows of strawberries this way. I typically use this tool for occasional watering (in especially dry times) of "hill plantings" of crops like squashes and cucumbers. I have also used it for deep-watering of fruit bushes and small trees. This idea is absolutely NOT being presented here as the solution to watering your whole garden.
    I have experimented in past years with drip-tape irrigation. It was a real bother to deal with. What I finally realized is that, in trying to keep my whole garden watered, I was doing something that didn't need to be done. The roots of young plants will strike deep for water and find sufficient water- if they are not continually watered from above. And if the plants are not spaced too close together, those deep roots will be able to supply the plant with all the moisture it needs.My "Planet Whizbang Idea Book For Gardeners" has an excerpt from an old farm almanac (from the 1800s) that explains this. The old timers knew. They didn't have the time or infrastructure to always be watering their gardens. But in a real dry spell, they would get out the buckets.
    Since making this video, I have pursued Minibed Gardening, which is an idea for growing a serious home garden without any artificial watering. After one year of experimentation, the idea worked beautifully. You can check it out here: czcams.com/video/F5ovc8XwGTI/video.html.
    For more information about the bucket irrigation kits I sell, click on this link: www.bucketirrigation.com

    • @yousircantknow8987
      @yousircantknow8987 Před 5 lety +2

      Labor intensive maintenance. Hand adjusting the drip for every plant on half an acre could take a fellow a couple of hours.

    • @dianelanderson5504
      @dianelanderson5504 Před 4 lety

      Herrick Kimball I cant get order to go thru. When I go to website I am told not secure. Can you send me an invoice thru PayPal so I can pay that way. Brilliantventure@yahoo.com. I would like 2 kits. I could not find an email for you. Need asap

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 4 lety

      @@dianelanderson5504 Sorry you're having a problem ordering. This is the first I've heard it. Are you ordering from this page? ... www.planetwhizbang.com/gardening
      My e-mail is: Herrick@planetwhizbang.com I will send you a PayPal invoice shortly. Thank you.

    • @dianelanderson5504
      @dianelanderson5504 Před 4 lety

      Herrick Kimball I used the link from you tube video. Thank you. Just paid invoice going on vacation in couple of weeks. Wanted to set up for watering in our absence. Thank you. This link works I will save it

  • @nereidapr1
    @nereidapr1 Před 7 lety +10

    that's an awesome idea for when it doesn't rain. 2 years ago we had no rain and they rationalized the water. i had to get as much water as i could to keep my garden alive. which i did, but this year it rained everyday and i had to bring them to my balcony. loved and subbed.

  • @SandoTrini
    @SandoTrini Před 5 lety +5

    Great idea. I had the same idea for squeezing the tubing to make the restriction. Glad to see it in service

  • @StreetMachine18
    @StreetMachine18 Před 6 lety +4

    I love those homemade pins!!! I made large “staples” out of coat hangers (just a u-bend). But those little circular pull taps are great!

  • @shannontemple6716
    @shannontemple6716 Před 7 lety +2

    I have found that a gentle soaking that doesn't cover the leaves with water and doesn't water areas that I don't want voluntary weeds, etc, is what plants love and thrive. You have given me loads of great ideas. Love the little home made pins. Good job!

    • @VladTheImpalerTepesIII
      @VladTheImpalerTepesIII Před 5 lety

      I don't know where you live, but weeds in my area grow whether the ground is watered or not. Most weeds are drought tolerant.

  • @Kayuu7
    @Kayuu7 Před 5 lety +4

    I made something like this for a small plastic covered greenhouse.
    I had 3 pails on top of each other with water flow going to each bucket. pieces used were from the hardware store for irrigation and alittle improvised thinking. The buckets were elevated I had a micro irrigation setup to each plant, i had drip valves for control, the two bottom buckets were designated to the plants, each bucket watered so many plants.the top bucket was the filler upper bucket. this could be moved around when emptied.
    I would fill the buckets up in the evening on workdays and in the mornings I would open the control valves x 2 and away I went to work. worked like a charm.
    most of the hardware I already had so I just needed some imagination to put it together.

  • @tenmilechicks
    @tenmilechicks Před rokem

    Your videos are great, you clearly show what you are doing and don't over explain ... thank you .. . We have subscribed!

  • @JamesJohnson-yh1oh
    @JamesJohnson-yh1oh Před 6 lety +3

    Elizabeth L. Johnson said, I do use all the black colored irrigation stuff, but when there's a plugged up hole or spot, I simply cannot get it cleaned out. At least with your clear plastic tubing everything is visible, easy to clean, etc (and probably wouldn't ever have to!) I don't store my tubing, it is so lengthy. With your method it is easy to handle, easy to store, so you don't ever have to repurchase and reassemble as a result of exposure to all year weather, as in my case of irrigation materials. Great idea!

  • @bishnubohara9271
    @bishnubohara9271 Před 6 lety +2

    Thanks a lot for sharing a valuable information .

  • @mmangla5575
    @mmangla5575 Před 7 lety +2

    Thanks for the information

  • @birungikenneth889
    @birungikenneth889 Před 6 lety +1

    fabulous project!

  • @matthewjohnson2853
    @matthewjohnson2853 Před 5 lety +6

    Some people are stupit, this is a good system. I had no problems with my setup & I recommend it to my friends.

  • @samirasamira73
    @samirasamira73 Před 7 lety +1

    great idea i love it and thank you to share us your video

  • @FigsForFunSA
    @FigsForFunSA Před 5 lety +1

    This is an amazing idea :)

  • @simpletruth9977
    @simpletruth9977 Před 6 lety +6

    Carrying 5 gallon buckets of water through the garden. You guys really know how to have a good time!!!

    • @jendubay3782
      @jendubay3782 Před 4 lety

      SIMPLE TRUTH move empty bucket. Fill with hose in place. Seems easy enough to me

  • @barbarareid387
    @barbarareid387 Před 7 lety +1

    I like your gentle voice and the video is great. I use a similar bucket system but have an old cut off hose quick released onto the bucket (I use a baby sock with an elastic as filter on the inside of the bucket... filters are expensive). I then attach end emitters to the hose around the plants and water in a circle (better pressure) on a raised bed. I blow out the system every week by reversing the quick release on the hose with the garden hose. Every bed has a bucket with a top zapped to it (I don't like to drown the bees etc.). I collect the system in the winter and put it out when I plant out marshalling the plants by the emitters. My water is collected from two 2500 gal. tanks. That does me the whole year.

  • @leeh6705
    @leeh6705 Před 2 lety +2

    Love the idea and was ready to purchase several kits, however I need to drip irrigate several plants at a time! But I love the video!

    • @haroldsmith6893
      @haroldsmith6893 Před 2 lety +2

      make your own and modify it to your needs. make it into a soaker hose kink the end and zip tie it to seal it the poke holes were your plants are. don't buy the kit. if you drill the hole correctly it will handle the pressure without the barb seal.

  • @adaholmes9210
    @adaholmes9210 Před 5 lety

    Great work!

  • @yeshuaisthewaythetruthandt515

    Thanku. God bless you

  • @marissarosaful
    @marissarosaful Před 4 lety +3

    Great system, I live in Australia and we are in a bad drought at the moment this will be enough to keep select things watered and keep within water restrictions.

  • @gordonreeder3451
    @gordonreeder3451 Před 5 lety +2

    I've been doing the same general thing for several years. But I use 1/16th id tubing that I weight on one end. I just toss the weighted end of the tube in the bucket and start a siphon. That's all. You are right about the watering schedule, Once every 5 days is plenty.

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 3 lety +1

      Thank you. Great idea.
      And totally safe, unlike when I once tried siphoning gas out of my car as a teenager. I got a mouthful and it was a memorably terrible experience. 😣

  • @mateopucu
    @mateopucu Před 5 lety +1

    THIS WORKS GREAT ON USED KITTY LITTER BUCKETS(!) I bought two and love 'em. Using water from my rain barrels. Thanks brah.

  • @TheTortmad
    @TheTortmad Před 3 lety +1

    Hello
    I like the ideal of this .This gives a deep watering and is better than just tipping a bucket of water to a plant as when this is done most of the water runs past all around the plant, where as your way just drips water to the spot and soaks the soil right though. Very good

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 3 lety

      Thank you, Vic. You have grasped the concept of this very well! 👍

  • @DanielinLaTuna
    @DanielinLaTuna Před 5 lety +2

    I love your homemade pin! I'll try your method, as I have sandy soils also

  • @joyhenry8086
    @joyhenry8086 Před 6 lety +2

    Very nice 👍 good idea

  • @YvonneCurry-jh2qe
    @YvonneCurry-jh2qe Před 3 lety +1

    You can also put more spigots in one bucket to speed up warering

  • @MMongoose1
    @MMongoose1 Před 5 lety +1

    You can do the same thing with just a bucket. put a tiny hole in the side, bottom of the bucket and place near the plant. easy peasy. I do this for trees that are all by themselves. I use an old bucket with a crack in it. lol

  • @lydvincecruz824
    @lydvincecruz824 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for sharing.

  • @Karl_B
    @Karl_B Před 8 lety +1

    Great idea Herrick and simple as well. It reminds me of the ones from ECHO from a number of years back. The ones that Chapin Living Waters used ECHO sold, but appears no longer. Perhaps your concept could be used for them?

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 8 lety +3

      Hi Karl,
      ECHO still sells the Chapin Living Waters irrigation kits. I bought one to better understand their concept. Their system stays in place, while my buckets are moved around the garden as needed. Also, they use the drip tape, which has a drip emitter every 12," while my buckets have the trickle valve, which allows a regulated drip or flow in a specific area. There are less components, less set-up, and more versatility with my bucket irrigation approach. However, Chapin Living Waters has a very well engineered and proven system for gravity-fed drip irrigation of a garden. I question the wisdom of everyday watering, which they advocate, but their systems are, evidently, helping a lot of people in third world countries grow their own food, and that is a beautiful thing.

  • @brandongibson1817
    @brandongibson1817 Před 3 lety

    I’m working on a hanging version of this where at the bottom I collect the water and re use it

  • @binhminh417
    @binhminh417 Před 2 lety

    Thank you!

  • @cd1168
    @cd1168 Před 5 lety

    what a beautiful weed free garden ... what is the name of that back fabric.. great natural waterers

  • @totamtips2141
    @totamtips2141 Před 4 lety +1

    okey....
    Amazing!
    👍👌

  • @purwanchalscientific642

    Needs to istallation small drip irrigation project in the high school.

  • @onetruehoneydip
    @onetruehoneydip Před 4 lety

    why do you plant a runner plant? i love your system and plan on buying a kit for my lil community plot (perhaps for my sisters plot as well).

  • @0007nick1
    @0007nick1 Před 5 lety +1

    What if you put a inch and a half long half inch PVC in the ground and put the hose on it that way whenever the the inch and a half PVC fills up with the drops of water. Dripping slower and that he will stay moisture for a long. Of time

  • @Medzo2
    @Medzo2 Před 7 lety +3

    Great idea but now how to use this technique to irrigate several separate plants?

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 6 lety +1

      The idea is not suited to watering several plantings at once. There are other ideas for that. Some people think that you can just put a longer hose on the pail and that will work to water more plants. It doesn't work. This is a spot watering technique. As simple as it gets. But not the answer to every garden watering situation.

  • @eieio-mn9pm
    @eieio-mn9pm Před 7 lety +15

    or you could put a drip tape along the entire row and then go sit on the porch ...nice and tidy garden ....ill give you that

    • @farmbeet2542
      @farmbeet2542 Před 7 lety

      No, I haven't tried that. But I will this year. I do have some red plastic mulch (bought it and never used it) and I plan to plant some new strawberries in the spring. So thanks for the idea!!

  • @josephnmn146
    @josephnmn146 Před 5 lety +1

    Holy F! This will take forever! Here I am complaining it takes 45 min each morning to water all my plants and garden but here you are spending all damn day lol! Sure its water efficient but some of us still work bro!

  • @PickledPoacher
    @PickledPoacher Před 7 lety +4

    Have you ever tried using a red plastic mulch sheet for your strawberries buddy? you will get a better crop from a red mulch plastic cover. I don't know why but ask James Wong who I took the tip from.

  • @ellekay1721
    @ellekay1721 Před 3 měsíci

    How could you use a regular garden hose instead of the small tubing?

  • @countryfrau8328
    @countryfrau8328 Před 6 lety

    I mean, maybe you could do something like that Cajun gardener does with pvc piping that he fills with water that goes right to the soil. I guess you could put some kind of valve in them at the bottom to control flow if you wanted to.... This would just be TOO slow....

  • @MMongoose1
    @MMongoose1 Před 5 lety +1

    why the cut tires??? just put a small hole in the plastic and plant through the plastic. Wont dry out as fast if you use a small hole. You are also wasting space. Run your pvc pipe with small holes in it (or drip tape or old garden hose with the end clamped and holes in it) under the plastic (connected to the bucket) and plant through small holes in the plastic. This will save water and space and not dry out as fast. Leaves also will stay dry and healthier.

  • @HazeOfLife
    @HazeOfLife Před 7 lety +2

    Where can I buy just the hardware brass fittings? I know those were purchased somewhere. A link would be appreciated! Thanks!
    Also, could you explain the hardware for the drip hose wing nut adjusters? Thanks!

    • @StreetMachine18
      @StreetMachine18 Před 6 lety +1

      The brass hose barb is probably like five dollars at Home Depot or your local hardware store. The wing nut is on a screw that goes through the hose, Not much to explain there

    • @wagnerpd5921
      @wagnerpd5921 Před 5 lety +1

      Warning: this information may have been stolen from NASA... copyright infringement rife!

    • @sweetvuvuzela4634
      @sweetvuvuzela4634 Před 5 lety

      Wagner PD so using a water tank connected to a pipe is a infringement ?

  • @bharadutaChannel
    @bharadutaChannel Před 4 lety

    thanks for the information, but I have one question. can this system be used for irrigation of spinach plantations, which have a tight spacing? thanks.

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 3 lety

      No. This watering technique is not suitable for that application.

  • @yasim9435
    @yasim9435 Před 2 lety

    What is th3 ordering part number for the bucket fitting that connects line to bucket?

  • @coffinshaker
    @coffinshaker Před 5 lety +2

    Clever idea, I like it. However there is one mystery to this video I can't figure out. Why is it that in the opening of this video you have a blue pen in your shirt pocket but at the first break where you show the contents of the kit you magically have 2? It's kept me up for the last two nights, please explain it to me so I can get some rest. Thank you.

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 5 lety +1

      Good question. I've wondered that myself. Those Pilot G-2 07 pens are amazing. I started with one and now I have hundreds of them. :-)

    • @ryanwaltos2206
      @ryanwaltos2206 Před 4 lety +1

      He drip watered his pens like his strawberries and the blue pens sprouted runners.

  • @staceystory7175
    @staceystory7175 Před 6 lety

    Nice

  • @donaldrouleau4269
    @donaldrouleau4269 Před 8 lety +1

    I like your tire sidewalls how did you make them or were did you get them from. Thanks

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 8 lety +1

      Donald... I cut the sidewalls out of old tires using a jigsaw. In less than a minute I can have two sidewalls cut out. This is discussed in my "Planet Whizbang Idea Book For Gardeners." But I'd bet someone has made a CZcams showing how easy it is to do. :-)

    • @wagnerpd5921
      @wagnerpd5921 Před 5 lety

      Have you ever driven down an interstate hwy or a lonely stretch of road? Plenty of tires.

  • @andreajohnsMyPotteryBliss

    Washington State University trialed garden plastic mulches. They found red plastic is the most effective color for tomatoes.

    • @wagnerpd5921
      @wagnerpd5921 Před 5 lety

      The school in Bellingham? Went there. Wouldn't go back.

  • @cristalbeardsley4596
    @cristalbeardsley4596 Před 7 lety

    Interesting indeed - but what about the tires leaching junk into the soil? Does that concern you? I am going to give some thought as to what I could use in place of those. Thanks very much, really enjoy your creativity.

    • @farmbeet2542
      @farmbeet2542 Před 7 lety

      No, it doesn't concern me. I'm persuaded from researching the issue that any leaching is very minimal. And plants are not biologically capable of taking up the molecule leachate, if there is any. But I can understand not wanting to use the tires. For another option, check out my Minibeds-On-Plastic blog. It's a new gardening system. minibedsonplastic.blogspot.com/

    • @wagnerpd5921
      @wagnerpd5921 Před 5 lety

      Don't use tires made in Red China.

  • @agustasister5624
    @agustasister5624 Před 5 lety

    Good god what a tdoy garden

  • @CraigOverend
    @CraigOverend Před 8 lety +1

    I like the simplicity of your wingnut and bolt adjustable dripper.
    How did you determine a bucket? :) I think Strawberry plant roots go down about 3 feet. So if the soil was bone dry, a 5 gallon bucket (0.66 cubic feet) would add 22% water volume over a 3 cubic feet area. Since yours don't look like they're wilting and the wilting point for sand is about 6%, or 12% for silt loam by water volume, you're at least 28% water volume which is near field capacity for loam, and pretty much ideal...

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 8 lety +2

      Interesting. I did not determine a bucket based on the knowledge you have. I just guessed it would be a good amount. :-) Thanks for the comment.

    • @mattuk1310
      @mattuk1310 Před 7 lety

      uhmm ??? "Strawberry plant roots go down about 3 feet "...what type of berries you growing Craig ?? I've been growing these for may years i've never seen more than maybe 8 inches

    • @CraigOverend
      @CraigOverend Před 7 lety +1

      The bulk of the root will be in the first foot but Dunlap have been shown to go down 3 feet: soilandhealth.org/wp-content/uploads/01aglibrary/010137veg.roots/010137ch18.html

    • @mattuk1310
      @mattuk1310 Před 7 lety +2

      wow i never thought that to be tru thanks for sharing the link too...I have 6 type of strawberries OZARK BEAUTY, White Carolina Pineberry, alpine white (small ones but tasty )
      Honeoye, & BEST BERRY & generic no name from home depot...lol
      I'll have to check out the Dunlap now ..i never knew they had so may types...
      i grow mine IN Ca 30 North OF San Francisco
      residential back yard berries flat grow...
      next yr i'm thinking barrels or rain gutters easier picking......i bet you grow in black plastic mounds...what the pros n cons do it that way ? and how do you get the plastic under on the sides
      Thanks for the share...Peace

    • @wagnerpd5921
      @wagnerpd5921 Před 5 lety

      How much yellowcake to make a fissile device? They sell SarahLee in grocery store.

  • @CarrieNita
    @CarrieNita Před 8 lety +1

    I have my qty 4 4'x6' beds set up with 3/8" soaker hoses. There are rain spouts coming off our roof beside the beds. If I set up rain barrels with 4-way manifolds to fill 5 gal buckets you used in your system, could I modify the fittings slightly to run them into the soaker hoses in each bed? I know it would have to be quite high off the beds.

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 8 lety

      I don't know. I had a soaker hose many years ago and it needed household water system pressure to work. If that is still the case with soaker hoses, gravity-feed water from a bucket would never do the job. A gravity-flow drip tape system like Chapin Living Waters uses would probably be a better way to go if you want to use rain water to irrigate rows.

    • @CarrieNita
      @CarrieNita Před 8 lety +1

      You are probably right, but Murphy's Law strikes again. I had set up a soaker hose system 2 days before I saw your bucket irrigation system. Now I will have to find a place to use your system in my small garden, lol. Thank you for your reply and keep the great ideas coming. God Bless you.

    • @wagnerpd5921
      @wagnerpd5921 Před 5 lety

      Are you a Rocket Scientist?

  • @MrWierdwildstuff
    @MrWierdwildstuff Před 5 lety +1

    Genius!!!

  • @aboveallholidaylighting9305

    cool tire scraps, whered you find those?

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 3 lety

      They are tire sidewalls. I cut them out of used tires. I have nearly 100 of them. They are useful in many ways.

  • @kathyrapp671
    @kathyrapp671 Před 2 lety

    can you run multiple lines on one bucket 🪣?

  • @CookingWithCows
    @CookingWithCows Před 8 lety +1

    could you poke pinholes into the hose and tighten down the trickling valve to make the water come out over the whole length of the hose so you could irrigate multiple plants with one hose? Maybe use a longer hose. As long as the bucket is sufficiently high up to provide water pressure, it should come out of the pinholes evenly. To water deeply, you could just refill the bucket instead of changing it's location

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 8 lety +2

      I have not tried the pinholes in a hose idea. However, I have hooked one of my irrigation buckets to a 30-foot length of drip tape, just like is used by the Chapin Living Waters irrigation system (www.chapinlivingwaters.org) and it worked perfectly. The bucket needs to be higher to get more water pressure in that kind of setup.

    • @CraigOverend
      @CraigOverend Před 8 lety

      Pinholes will block easily on gravity-fed systems.

    • @kmac713
      @kmac713 Před 8 lety

      I like your idea.

    • @wagnerpd5921
      @wagnerpd5921 Před 5 lety

      The guy is a Flagellist.

  • @geaj4214
    @geaj4214 Před 2 lety

    Are you able to turn the water off also is there a way to attach a battery operated timer so the water turn on on its own

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 2 lety

      Yes, the water can be turned off by tightening the wing nut. No, this idea is probably not suited for using a timer to control on-and-off action.

  • @mrwhipper21
    @mrwhipper21 Před 2 lety

    OK for a couple plants but seems labor intensive if you have many plants to water.

  • @vnswamy2008
    @vnswamy2008 Před 8 lety +1

    How do you fill the bucket with hose dragged around or you carry down the line? I am jealous looking at your garden Lol

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 8 lety +2

      I have a 50ft length of hose from my house that reaches to the edge of my garden. So I fill and carry from there. In an off-grid situation (something I think about with my gardening), I have a creek behind my house and would carry buckets from there using a shoulder yoke (I actually have three shoulder yokes-one for me, one for my wife, and one for a guest). I was a Boy Scout. :-)

    • @mattuk1310
      @mattuk1310 Před 7 lety

      why not get another 50ft hose and water w/ it ...seems like them buckets take you all day.

    • @rajariyasat717
      @rajariyasat717 Před 7 lety

      very.nice.Tip

  • @TheTortmad
    @TheTortmad Před 3 lety

    Hello Herrick
    I have another question. Your strawberry plants being deep watered are under raised beds. How or what is the black you used and how do you raise it up like that
    I see orange trees here in Spain the same
    I would like to do the same but yours look nice and smooth domed
    How did you do it.
    Thanks
    Vic

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 3 lety

      Hi Vic,
      That black plastic is some inexpensive plastic mulch that I rolled down the row and tucked into the soil. The ground was tilled up first and then hoed and raked into a neat mound. The plastic is straight along the row because I took the time to set up a string line. I'm an old carpenter and I like stringlines. 🙂

    • @TheTortmad
      @TheTortmad Před 3 lety

      Great Job again

  • @thewandywanz
    @thewandywanz Před 7 lety

    Anything I can use in place of tired sidewalls? I don't have access to lots of used tires nor the ability to cut them. Thanks.

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 7 lety

      You can make a square of 2x4 wood instead of using a tire sidewall. Check out minibedsonplastic.blogspot.com/

    • @maryhornbostel6959
      @maryhornbostel6959 Před 5 lety

      A sharp knife cuts the sidewall of the tire away from the tread easily

  • @crazysquirrel9425
    @crazysquirrel9425 Před 5 lety

    I did something similar. 5 gal of water gone in 2 hours. So I built a hugelgarden....

  • @nroger01
    @nroger01 Před 4 lety +1

    Subbed.

  • @chickencoop4439
    @chickencoop4439 Před 8 lety +3

    Could you tell me the actual name of that white covering fabric? thanks!

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 8 lety +2

      It is Agribon row cover fabric. Available from numerous places. Johnny's seeds has it. Comes in different weights. I don't recall the weight I'm using but it is the lighter fabric, which allows more light transmission.

    • @OldAlabamaGardener
      @OldAlabamaGardener Před 8 lety +3

      Agribon 19, it is the lightest of that line of row cover. I have at times put it on double when the weather forecast it was going to get down in the teens at night.
      Hello Chicken Coop!
      OAG

    • @wagnerpd5921
      @wagnerpd5921 Před 5 lety

      Netting for gardens.

  • @smalltown9052
    @smalltown9052 Před 5 lety +1

    With the bucket irrigation. Can I buy attachments anywhere that allow me to splice the hose to run to multiple tom plants? I have my plants in buckets and want to do D.I. I have 9 tom plants. Would love to set up one for my peppers also

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 5 lety

      Hi Morgan,
      When I was experimenting with this watering system I purchased some brass Y-fitting with the thought that I would divert the flow of water to several plants from one fitting on the bucket. In theory, it makes sense, but in practice, it doesn't, or it didn't for me. The water chose to go to one line and did not flow evenly to the other(s). Thus, the only way to effectively drip irrigate multiple plants from a single bucket is to have multiple fittings on the bucket, with a single hose going to each plant. Thanks for the question. Best wishes.

    • @smalltown9052
      @smalltown9052 Před 5 lety

      @@herrickkimball oh ok. Well each kit is 16$ so that'd be way too much for me to spend on this system to correctly send water to each bucket. Lol it is a great, simple idea though if you only need one or two. 😁

    • @jendubay3782
      @jendubay3782 Před 4 lety +1

      smalltown 90 cheap any easy way is to do a wicking system. Get a 5g bucket, and put between two of your Tom plants. Run a cotton line from inside the water bucket to inside the soil of the Tom plants as close as you can get it. Water is wicked from the water bucket slowly to the plant. Cheap and easy.

  • @willemsdominica
    @willemsdominica Před 4 lety

    If i have 50 plants do i have to put 50 buckets?

  • @siddasgupta679
    @siddasgupta679 Před 3 lety

    Do you have a way to connect the hose to a t-tape drip tape so I may irrigate an entire row instead of a single plant? Thank you

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 3 lety +1

      No. Sorry. Check out Chapin Living Waters: www.chapinlivingwaters.org/

  • @richardmartin7484
    @richardmartin7484 Před 4 lety

    Good video. Cured passenger tires contain carcinogens.

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 3 lety

      Correct. The question is if the carcinogens leach, and they probably do to some degree, though that degree is negligible. The next question is if the very small degree of leachate is taken up by the plants. The answer is no. It is not molecularly possible for the plant to absorb such leachate. The next question is if the negligible leachate does any damage it the soil biology and there is no study that I know of that has been done to find out. For me, the usefulness of the tires outweighs any extremely minimal carcinogenic leachate. There are many other carcinogens in the environment that concern me a whole lot more than tires. But to each his own. Do what you are comfortable with doing when it comes to these things. 👍

  • @countryfrau8328
    @countryfrau8328 Před 6 lety

    I like this but there HAS to be a faster way to water more plants at a time. Is there a way to hang buckets or do something like that?

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 6 lety +1

      Hi Country Frau,
      There certainly ARE faster ways to water more plants at a time. Lee Reich, the garden writer, has his gardens hooked to drip tapes fed by a hose and controlled by a timer. That would be ideal. The method I show here is NOT in any way good for watering a lot of plants easily. It's a very simple, very effective low-tech approach to deep-watering individual plantings. Although I show it on a row of strawberries, it is better suited to spot watering of more widely spaced plantings, like squash plants, bushes, or young trees. My objective is to not have to do any artificial watering in my garden. I have pretty much achieved that with my Minibed Gardening system, but last year I still resorted to using these buckets to deep-water individual tomato plants in Minibeds at fruiting time, and the buckets with trickle valve worked great for that. If you are a slave to watering your garden, you may want to check out the Minibed system: czcams.com/video/F5ovc8XwGTI/video.html. Thanks for the comment

  • @anonh5691
    @anonh5691 Před 2 lety +1

    How long will that plastic hose last in the sun and heat in your experience?

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 2 lety

      Mine are a few years old. Can’t remember exactly. I use them intermittently. They don’t look like new any more but are still in working condition.

  • @pablourganicbioinsumos
    @pablourganicbioinsumos Před 6 lety +2

    Hello. Did you try with Jadam EM in the bucket , with some rock dust ... o a Bio ferment with manure broun sugar yeast and rock dust .... ? 👍🤠🌱🌞

  • @SolanaGalaxy
    @SolanaGalaxy Před 5 lety

    Hi there just wondering if the wingnut is able to completely shut off the water or not?

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 5 lety

      Lazy Hitman Yes. There are washers under the wing nuts. He hose can be pinched shut.

    • @SolanaGalaxy
      @SolanaGalaxy Před 5 lety

      Herrick Kimball Thank you very much just needed to clarify

  • @crazysquirrel9425
    @crazysquirrel9425 Před 3 lety

    Can't afford $16.50 for the kit. Sticker shock prevented me from even looking at the shipping costs.
    May have to manually water due to the costs of semi-automatic watering.

  • @hunglafung2948
    @hunglafung2948 Před 7 lety +1

    Can I use this for a few flower plant at the same time?

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 7 lety

      You can only water one plant, or group of plants that are together, with the drip valve. If you wanted to water more than one plant, you could put more hoses on a single bucket.

    • @TheJunkyardgenius
      @TheJunkyardgenius Před 7 lety

      hung la Fung just run a long tube from the bucket and put holes in it wherever a plant is with a sewing needle and at the end put a plug/bung or bend it over and clamp it. play about with different sized needles to get different drip rates depending on the water needs of your plants and local climate. great idea but watering one plant at a time and then moving it is a lot of time spent watering you would be quicker using a watering can

    • @wagnerpd5921
      @wagnerpd5921 Před 5 lety

      No. Only veggies.

  • @user-dh3ih8kq3i
    @user-dh3ih8kq3i Před 5 lety

    Wery good

  • @raycut8
    @raycut8 Před 6 lety +5

    Put that table on wheels

  • @reneecase8678
    @reneecase8678 Před 2 lety

    How many would you need to do an entire garden?

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 2 lety

      These bucket irrigation and fertigation devices are not intended to irrigate an entire garden. They are for occasional deep watering of certain plantings (like squash or cucumber hills) in a home garden. Or of newly planted trees and bushes. Occasional liquid fertigation of such planting is also an ideal application for these drip-feed devices. Check out my top pinned comment for more explanation.

  • @oregonpatriot1570
    @oregonpatriot1570 Před 2 lety +1

    I hang my bucket from a tree branch next to the garden (which is only 12' X 12')
    I had to paint the bucket because the wife didn't like an orange Home Depot bucket hanging in the tree. 🤣

    • @wmluna381
      @wmluna381 Před 2 lety +1

      Sounds like she'll keep you from sticking a mailbox in a Home Depot bucket in front of the house too. My kind of woman.
      I would seriously not live on a town / street / next to a person that allowed or did that. Looks super trashy.

    • @oregonpatriot1570
      @oregonpatriot1570 Před 2 lety +1

      @@wmluna381 Ha! Where I live? You would need TEN cement filled buckets to hold that mail box upright. Troutdale has hurricane winds almost every winter. (70 mph plus)
      If you want to see what that's like? Watch this video from a few miles from my house, and try to imagine that for days on end, several times each winter... czcams.com/video/H71dc1mCmv0/video.html

    • @wmluna381
      @wmluna381 Před 2 lety

      @@oregonpatriot1570 Holy cow, I would need to strap myself to some of those buckets. That wind would blow ME away.
      I'm in SE MI. The township over where I work has no qualms over HD, ir even pallet, mailbox 'holders'. Some perfectly nice houses and they put that out front. Boggles my mind that no effort is made to paint, camo, or cover them in some way.

    • @oregonpatriot1570
      @oregonpatriot1570 Před 2 lety +1

      @@wmluna381
      What a crack up!
      I was born & raised in the Grand Rapids area, and I remember seeing mailboxes in cement buckets along the rural back roads.

  • @douglawton3990
    @douglawton3990 Před 5 lety

    What area of the country are you in? It looks like desert....

  • @simpson6700
    @simpson6700 Před 4 lety +4

    watering one plant at a time seems tedious and slow.

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 3 lety

      Deep watering with a trickle is slow, but not tedious. I just set the bucket up and walk away. It is not a universally applicable watering technique. But it works remarkably well in certain situations.

  • @smittys19daytona
    @smittys19daytona Před 7 lety +17

    you must have a lot of time on your hand why not just install a regular drip system ?

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 6 lety +2

      I have installed a drip system in years past. It was a hassle. For my climate, and plant spacings, I rarely need artificial watering. Occasional spot watering of some plantings during a very dry stretch is sufficient. Last year, however, I experimented with the Minibed Gardening system and no artificial watering at all was needed.

  • @hunglafung2948
    @hunglafung2948 Před 7 lety +1

    I order it and try , I want to know that how I can prolong the host?

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 7 lety

      Thank you for the order. It will ship out tomorrow. You can make the hose longer with another length of hose and a barbed connector, which should be available at Lowes or Home Depot.

    • @wagnerpd5921
      @wagnerpd5921 Před 5 lety

      Don't deprive 'em of oxygen: people Luv breathing.!

  • @sunnifreyer2759
    @sunnifreyer2759 Před 4 lety

    Why not natural mulch rather than plastic, which prevents rain water from percolating into the ground and alters the microbial system in the ground. Natural mulch will add to the soil and prevent the weeds.

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 3 lety

      Natural mulch is fine, if you have a plentiful supply, and it does not have herbicide carryover. There is plenty of subsoil moisture under the plastic. The microbial system is altered to some degree but not to any negative effect. Almost all organic-certified food you buy these days has been grown with the aid of polyethylene mulch. I resisted polyethylene for decades. Now I'm an advocate for it. Do what works for you. 👍

  • @javiergarcia---
    @javiergarcia--- Před 6 lety +1

    thats quite of hassle dont you think?

  • @kmac713
    @kmac713 Před 8 lety +5

    I admire your ingenuity, and I like how well made your devices are. But that seems like an awful lot at work just water strawberries! You mean to tell me that you move those buckets and that table up and down that row? All due respect but that's crazy!
    Now if you had big fat wheels on the table so you can easily roll your buckets up and down that would make a little bit more sense.
    I would Bury a 2 inch PVC pipe with holes cut in a matching where the strawberry plants were, put an elbow on one end and a cap on the other end. Stick a hose in the elbow, and you get fantastic watering because, as you know, the pipe is in the ground and osmosis will pull the water through the system.

    • @kingtyson333
      @kingtyson333 Před 7 lety +1

      I would hope he puts that table on wheels soon...

  • @crazysquirrel9425
    @crazysquirrel9425 Před 5 lety

    works fine until the algae builds up in it. A 5gal bucket will drain in about 2 hours....

  • @timjones1583
    @timjones1583 Před 3 lety

    What about HEAT!! 4 or 5 hours in the sun and youd be watering with hot water.

  • @jamesgarrett4030
    @jamesgarrett4030 Před 5 lety

    Why not add another line to each bucket and do four plants every two buckets, quicker, you would have to work into the night going at the pace you were going at.. it's only really the first watering that needs to be a real watering. I'd say half a bucket every day would be ample. You would end up over watering and stunting the plants broth that way and be inviting bugs in if like a swamp in there.. I'd perminant!y have one bucket to every two plants and then fill the buckets via a main water line unless nature fills them up. I'd add some nutrients periodically also.. not kicking the system. It's quite good but just wants a larger reservoir or something ... You want to eliminate the time spent watering not make it a routine choir.

    • @jamesgarrett4030
      @jamesgarrett4030 Před 5 lety

      Plants looked healthy mind.!! Happy gardening ....James

  • @jeanfisse6736
    @jeanfisse6736 Před 2 lety

    Quand vous publiez en France, ayez la politesse, soit de parler francais ou de soutitrer
    Merci d'avance

  • @timpage5021
    @timpage5021 Před 5 lety +2

    Bro there's no way you can make money selling these by showing them EXACTLY what they can go out and buy cheaper themselves.

  • @helenwilliams3115
    @helenwilliams3115 Před 3 lety

    O

  • @phd5753
    @phd5753 Před 5 lety

    It's not a good idea ! It's a time consuming method ! I can use a garden hose to water those plants 50 time faster than those buckets. Save time and energy to go getting those buckets filled up ! Save tons of money on buying those material ! And more !

    • @jendubay3782
      @jendubay3782 Před 4 lety +1

      hung pham the point is to slow release the water.

  • @romygime5822
    @romygime5822 Před 5 lety

    One bucket for each plant? You are very rich person Better coca cola bottles that is for the poor people

  • @MMongoose1
    @MMongoose1 Před 5 lety

    This is stupid. I use a pvc pipe with small holes along the length of my strawberry row and connect the pvc pipe to a bucket and water all my plants with one bucket. Put water into the bucket and it waters all my plants. The small holes allow a slow watering. Can do several rows with one bucket.

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 5 lety

      Hi Mary,
      I'm sorry that you have totally misunderstood and mischaracterized the point of this video, and of the idea I present. It is NOT an idea for irrigating rows of plants. Please read my pinned comment at the top of this page for some clarification. As for your idea, it is not stupid at all. You are a genius. Thank you for adding to the discussion.

  • @phatpig4012
    @phatpig4012 Před 5 lety

    That is ridiculous. Who has time to water like that.

  • @marieluise2759
    @marieluise2759 Před 2 lety

    You're not showing hose connecting to bucket.
    You're not showing how 1 hose does whole row. It only shows drip coming out end of ONE hose. Not a good video. Please explain it better.

    • @herrickkimball
      @herrickkimball  Před 2 lety

      Please read the pinned comment at the top of the comments section. It answers your question.