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Two Ways to Save on Watering the Plants

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Our poor little container garden is getting fried by the Texas heat, which hit triple digits last week. It seems that they wilt every day without a splash of water. But one day, someone else took the reigns: the BF went to get the hose from the side of the apartment building, and soaked each and every one of those plants. They were green and perked up for days! Why?

 
 

Turns out, drenching plants once a week (or every three days, in hot-hot-hot weather like ours), can actually be better for the plants because it mimics a heavy rainfall. Hose incident aside, we've started collecting our kitchen and bath water, then drenching one or two plants with it at a time. This helps to save water, and also gives the plants a healthy soaking.

If you have access to your own garden hose, though, consider the slow-soak method for watering. You can either purchase a soaker hose, or repurpose the one you've got by poking holes in it. Snake it around the garden, and set the faucet to low, slowly irrigating your beds.

Either way, we think you may save some water in the meantime — and if anything, you'll save your plants!

(Image: Amber Byfield for Re-Nest.com.)

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Comments (3)

Don't you just *love* Texas this time of year? :/ I'm doing pretty much the same thing and have not had any heat-related plant deaths yet, which makes me happy. But then, I've also been buying more succulents.

posted by whytephoenix on June 15th 2009 at 5:04pm
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P.S. Think *big* containers. Ten inches, bare minimum.

posted by whytephoenix on June 15th 2009 at 5:09pm
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one of my favorite plants I have was like totally wilted the other day. (i live in TX, too) I drenched it and the next day the leaves looked alive again!

posted by witchbaby on June 15th 2009 at 8:01pm
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