High Water Bill
Gregory Watts
last year
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jrb451
last yearGregory Watts
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Comments (23)So much great advice! Thank you Ingrid and Michaelg! I know someone who goes to a feed store for horses. I will tell him to pick me up some 40lb bags of alfalfa and I can collect leaves from the local parks to mulch with. Checking Ashdown and Vintage for the sales, too. Thanks Diane_nj, Moroseaz, Silverkelt, Karl_bapst_rosenut, Predfern, Terryjean, Sammy, Jacqueline3, Roselvr and Canadian_rose for the wealth of info.!!! You all have made me realize that compost makes the garden world go 'round. Also thanks Hoovb and Particentral, for putting things in perspective. I suppose it's all relative and there are other hobbies that can be more expensive, but creating a gardening budget will help me get to the point of being wealthy enough to fly airplanes as a hobby, keep show grade koi and collect expensive art. Now, dealing with show dogs is not a hobby I would pursue. :) Juliet...See MoreNew Backyard
Comments (2)My waterbill shows 1 year previous history, you should call your utility and ask about history. In this drought I am hoping your utility will want to share info with you. When and if you decide to replace it all...plan and research. Get some books, start with the Western Garden Book. You can't mix natives or drought tolerant plants with water needy plants very well....See MoreAnyone else with a high water bill?
Comments (14)Mine was around $270 0r $230, not sure because when I opened the envelope and peeked inside I saw a 2 folowed by a seven or three. Shut it real quickly and later told my wife the water bill came and that it was around $200 and before she could ask any questions I was out the door. This is for a three month period, not bad but much higher than normal. Have about a 5000 Sq. Ft. lawn and am pleased to say that it was practically the only green lawn around, roses, anuals and perrenials did beautifully. Quick story, had a neighbor that kept asking me what my water bill was and I kept telling them that when I found out I'de let them know, am very sure they were having a few laughs at my expense:)) By the way they deemed it wasteful to water in summer. Well, when I told them how much it was they had the most pleasing grin on their face. O.K. I thought, know my turn. OH! by the way how much is it going to cost you to replace or fix your 5000 Sq. FT. of lawn that's burned? As you might expect it, no more pleasing grins just a slight murmur of what I thought was hundreds of dollars. So we said good bye and I went back to a beautiful green landscape:)) Jimmy...See MoreAre you planning for next summer's heat wave?
Comments (38)I hope Susan is right and that El Nino will give us all some drought relief. Sometimes El Nino brings us a really wet summer....does anyone remember the summer of 2004? It wouldn't quit raining here at our house. Other times, though, El Nino peters out in April or May, so I guess we'll have to keep our fingers crossed. What worked for me in the summer of '06: Lots of mulching. Mulching early and often. Watering very early or very late in the day to minimize evaporation. Using soaker hoses and drip irrigation. Grouping plants together with similar needs, that is....put all your "thirstiest" plants in one bed and give them more water if they need it. Growing more stuff in containers. Water gardening is great, but I did have to keep adding water to the smallest pond so it wouldn't dry up completely. I moved all my water plants to that one pond and let the big ponds dry up. Planting mostly native plants and a few very well adapted non-native plants. One of the most important things I have done these last few years is to observe how all the native plants on our acreage react to the weather. I watch to see which ones are the hardiest, which ones come back even after going dormant and losing all their leaves. I try to learn from the native plants, and it guides me in making decisions about what to plant and what not to plant too. In the veggie garden, I always try to have plants in the ground as early as possible in the spring so they can produce before the hot weather and lack of rain kill them. I evaluate the veg. garden in mid-June and decide whether it is worth it financially to continue to water, or whether to turn off the hose and finish out the summer with 'dry-land' gardening. I do always put a few tomato plants and pepper plants in containers so I keep them going by watering them even if I let the rest of the veg garden go dry. I select varieties carefully. Vegetables that have been grown for many years in the southwest do better for me than many of the modern-day hybrids that guzzle water. The same is true of many flowers. And, I'm hoping for a grasshopper year this year EXACTLY like we had last year. It was our best year ever as we had hardly any grasshoppers at all. Our county had lots of grasshoppers, but they weren't at our house. I think the guineas had a lot to do with that. Also, I've put out semasphore every other year or so, so it is probably well established on our land and is doing its job in keeping the grasshopper population down. My poor guineas had to range far and wide to find the grasshoppers they wanted to eat. Luckily my neighbors are very tolerant and didn't mind having the guineas coming over to eat their ticks and grasshoppers. As far as I know, except for the vegetable garden which mostly died after I quit watering it in late June, I didn't lose many plants. I did lose some of the common big green elephant ears that were in dry shade. And I lost my banana shrub. Plants that survived the drought of 06: Native redbuds (I watered them once a month, just when they seemed about to die. I usually don't water them at all.) Native oaks, hackberries, pecans, willows, walnuts, hickories, ashes, some sumac, wild blackberries, wild grapes, trumpet vine and elms all survived (unirrigated). The native roughleaf dogwoods and persimmons suffered greatly and had lots of leaf scorching and lost some but not all leaves. They didn't die though. The wild plums that grow along all the fence lines here in southern Oklahoma all died, or at least went dormant. We're waiting to see if they green up in the spring. The Mexican plums handled the heat well. Native cottonwoods had a little dieback near the top of the crown, but were otherwise unscathed. Understory plants in the woods did better than prairie plants in the meadows in full sun. Guess the shade helped them. These included black cherries, American beautyberries, indian currants, redbuds, black haw viburnums, virginia creeper, greenbrier and poison ivy (in the shade they lived, in the sun they died), possom haw hollies, `and many others I can't identify. The river oats grasses went dormant exceptionally early. All the prairie grasses went dormant early and many wildflowers did the same. However, the native sunflowers hung in there all summer as did the milkweeds and a few other flowers like the greenthread daisies. Some of the plants we've planted in the yard around our house that did well: desert willow, chaste tree, four o'clocks, American cross vine, sweet autumn clematis, Burford hollies, southern wax myrtle, cannas, verbena bonariensis, purple wintercreeper, the low, spreading ground-cover type junipers and Madam Galens trumpet creepers. Most sumacs along the roadside went totally dormant (we thought they were dead) and then revived in the fall. Some Eastern Red Cedars turned brown and died but some didn't. As far as the ones that survived...they'll be dying soon as we continue to cut them down and remove them. With our large wooded area, this is an ongoing job. We had a small amount of rain at the end of July and then again at the end of August. This caused many of the wildflowers that normally bloom in spring/early summer to suddently sprout and bloom. Maybe they were there all along, but were dormant and so we hadn't noticed them. The fall bloomers like liatris amd goldenrod and helnium and the little fall asters started a little late but put on a great show. Of course, it doesn't take much water to keep them happy. The plants that surprised me the most? Eggplants and my sweet peppers and hot peppers. Long after I stopped watering the veg garden, they were flowering and fruiting and carrying on, business as usual, in spite of the drought. They were still fruiting when they froze in late November. Okra, sweet potatoes and back-eyed peas fared better than most of the other veggies. On the edge of the garden, the white-flowered daturas (aka jimsonweed) hung on through the heat. The devil's claw did not. The black-eyed susan vines got really sad looking after I stopped watering the veg. garden (they grow on the fence that surrounds it), but stayed alive and put on new leaves and new flowers in the fall after small amounts of rain began to fall. They were tougher than I expected them to be. Sadly, despite my best efforts, the bermuda grass DID NOT die. Hoping for a better year, courtesy of El Nino, in 2007. Dawn...See MoreJake The Wonderdog
last yearlast modified: last yearGregory Watts
last yearJake The Wonderdog
last yearkudzu9
last yearlast modified: last yearGregory Watts
last year
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Gregory WattsOriginal Author