SAVE WATER and GROW BIGGER at the SAME TIME with Olla Irrigation!
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- Опубликовано: 15 май 2024
- In this video, I explain how watering your garden beds and container plants with ollas or clay pots can save water. Plus, I give you my review of Thirsty Earth's Olla Watering System as seen here: thethirstyearth.com/
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Self Sufficient Me is based on our small 3-acre property/homestead in SE Queensland, Australia, about 45kms north of Brisbane - the climate is subtropical (similar to Florida). I started Self Sufficient Me in 2011 as a blog website project where I document and write about backyard food growing, self-sufficiency, and urban farming in general. I love sharing my foodie and DIY adventures online, so come along with me and let's get into it! Cheers, Mark :)
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#gardening #olla #water - Хобби
G'day Everyone, I hope you are all growing well! Thirsty Earth's Olla Watering System as reviewed in the video is here: thethirstyearth.com/ #not sponsored. Thanks for your support and have fun "getting into it!" Cheers :)
I'm trying an experiment ATM down the paddock by the creek were the soil is always wet. Dunno how it will go? It maybe to wet? I'd love to plant more seeds and plants but I'm not sure if the cows and kangaroos rabbits so will just eat it all.
Oh btw I'm not to far from you near Nanango area.
Glue two cheap unpainted/unglazed flower pots (big box store/hobby lobby, etc.) together with construction adhesive and cap off one of the holes, this will be the bottom. Use the saucer as a cap for the other hole which will be on top. Cheap alternative to the custom made versions. I have a ton in my raised beds and they work great.
the way to say olla is oy-ya :) and it means pot actually. hola is hello.
In Spanish, H is silent, J sounds like an H, and two Ls sound like a Y.
I'll try it with old, thin-walled hollow bricks. There are also tubular tiles for roof construction. The underside is closed with mortar, the top can be filled up. Such a brick costs about 20-30 cents. Let's see how it goes.
Hi Mark, over the last 5 years I have converted all my raised vege beds ( around 35 sq m) to home made Ollas as we are off grid , I believe in the mountains just to the west of your place. I slowly accumulated clay pots from a well known large hardware chain ( B) when on special at $1 each. Sealed the hole in one pot, attached the other using sealastic on the 2 rims to form a kind of diamond shape, painted the top/base of one (not plugged) to prevent evaporation and have 4-5 per sq m. They each hold just under 4L .Placed a stone or bit of tile over the fill hole to discourage critters.
Filling them every 5-7 days is the water access equivalent to 2.5 cm rain fall. If it rains can go 2-3 weeks without filing. I have literally over a hundred in and never surface water unless to soak in amendments. I now plant in circles or spirals around each olla, looks cute. 5 years experience and I can safely say large vege beds can be done off grid and the plants absolutely thrive. Occaisionally one will have the sealastic fail, 5 minutes to pull out , wipe clean and reseal for another 4-5 years use.
Research shows around 95% of the water in ollas is available to the roots compared to around 10% for surface watering. For anyone wanting to make their own very economically there is a great video on YT in the channel "Under the Choko Tree".
Thank you.. watering is such a key component of growing. Appreciate yr knowledge.. Coll
What size pots did you buy? And what kind of paint did you use? Thanks for your comment. It sounds like you've set up a great system.
Thankyou 💚
So lucky people like you use the comment section. Thank you 🙏🏼
Making and installing clay pot irrigation (Under the choko tree)
ruclips.net/video/4AGbqrTek44/видео.html
I've got a few I've made myself from unsealed terracotta pots. Two pots together, sealed with water tank silicone, and a rubber grommet for the top and bottom holes. I seal the bottom hole and leave the top one unsealed so I can just pop out the rubber grommet to refill. They've worked pretty well; key is to have them covered with mulch so they don't heat up and evaporate faster. Very cheap, couple of dollars worth of terracotta (honestly the grommets were more expensive but you can get a multipack) and a couple of days of patience to let the silicone dry.
I've done the same thing myself with unglazed pots. I used concrete to seal the holes. Filling them was a pain, but after seeing the video, I'm going to use drip irrigation tubing or something similar and hook them all up to a bucket. It will make using them much easier. I like to do diy, so it will be right up my alley.
Any chance you could make a shortt clip to show exactly what you did? I love the low cost solution you made!
@lothre,yeah, I would like to see a video about it too.
I've done the same and set it up with an auto timer and tubing to the hose, for automatic top up. The trick is to not seal the tubing to the olla, or you'll end up blowing some up like I did!
@@sapphyre8646 Thanks for the advice.
When I was growing up Dad used a 5 gallon bucket with holes punched in the bottom and sides to water our tomato plants. He would fill the bucket with cow manure (yes we had cattle) And water and feed the tomato plants at the same time. We always had so many tomatos we gave them to anyone in our church that wanted them.
Good idea!
I've done something similar with 4" plastic pots. I can spray heavy into the pot, and it will seep in slowly. Really helps combat poor soil that wants to go hydrophobic
My mum is chilean so she speaks spanish, "el potto" made her crack up as "potto" can be slang for someone's bottom 😅 love your humour and all your advice ❤ we've grown so much with your help and amazing tips! Love to you and your family for your sincereity and generosity. Keep making such great videos!
I made my own with clay pots and I have found them most useful with tomatoes. They absolutely thrive on that steady source of water and there is not problem with wetting the leaves and getting any diseases or mildew.
Olla is an Egyptian water pot. These are low-fired unglazed clay pots that keeps water cool by sweating (since it's unglazed). The heat is let out, and you can have cool water in desert heat!
The Egyptian pronunciation is two syllables (go figure) starting with ol where the O is pronounced like in "Oh!" and la as you would normally pronounce it. Very similar to how Mark pronounced oyia at the end of the video but replace y sounds with L. No idea what it's called in China, but I would wager they don't call it olla.
Hmm that word is used in Spanish for a similar container, with the ll pronounced as a y.
@@mssixty3426 Spain has a lot of Arab influence. Look up Andalusia and read about its origin.
I think something usefull and easygoing was found in several countries. In Germany they say its from Mexico. Therefore Oyas would be correct. Who cares as long as a good idea is spreading. ❤
Its not Egyptian. It’s a latin word and all the Spanish conquered people used them including Native Americans.
Mark it’s pronounced oy-ya or even o-ya like tor-ti-lla. Ya ending.
After years of experimenting with irrigation techniques here in hot and arid, 9b Sacramento, California, I have resolved to using a method that does not waste water and does a deep watering condition to keep all my planters productive. I use 1/4 inch drip line with emitters every 6 inches buried about 4 inches in good compost and top soil mix then heavily mulched. I use the finger test to check for moisture regularly and run my drip lines 2 times a day in hot weather for 10 minutes each time about 8 hours apart, so 4am and noon. I have had no deaths and good success growing almost anything. Thanks for your fun videos, I love them all.
Live in the coastal area of Monterey County. While our temps aren't as hot as Sacto, we've got water issues here. So I'm doing to try this method & see if I can use less water than we do with our regular drip system.
I'm very happy that the "ancient method" is spreading. This is also what home plant growers have also tried to figure out in modern methods for summer trips. The terracotta just seems so much better than a plastic bottle for this. The difficult part of this has been that you kinda have to DIY your way around the regular terracotta pots for them to work like this, it's not convenient (the shape is not very practical) or very easy. In the future we're gonna need all the ways to preserve water and be efficient in gardening.
Honestly I give your videos a thumbs up at the beginning because I know it’s going to be entertaining and educational even though I’m in Missouri, right in the middle of the USA I always find them useful!
Thumbs up at the start is worth two in my opinion - thank you! All the best :)
This also works very well for growing out fruit trees in pots in the nursery. I found that my trees grew faster and larger and were worth more than smaller trees at market. Profit increase about 15%.
How long did it take you to recoup the cost of the system?
Very interesting and coming from a retail perspective that's gold to increase profit and have a bigger healthier product for the customer to purchase. Nice one! Cheers :)
For what pot sizes? Which type of olla?
I'm also interested in more info on this setup, it sounds awesome!
G'day Mark.
I'm glad you "lettuce" have a look at the system in your bed as having seen a glimpse of it in the previous video. I'm aware of the practice of using ceramic pots, but have not seen a connected system like this. Fascinating.
Thanks and all the best.
Daz.
LOL... Lettuce not get too carried away with the dad jokes Daz! Cheers mate :)
@@Selfsufficientme Hah, hah, watching your videos does that. 😂
The terracotta plant spikes that can be purchased on Amazon or other sites, that you put a wine or soft drink bottle into as the water reservoir, work a treat in a smaller garden. They are quite cheap, and much cheaper than that Thirsty Earth system. They may not be so practical for a garden as big as your garden Mark, but good for a smaller garden or gardens with lots of pots. They kept my Western Australian garden alive over a boiling hot summer.
Oooooh, I may check these out!
Me too, Adelaide summers can be stinkers
I was given long plastic cone shaped watering spikes that screw onto a soft drink bottle, I use them for individual bushes and new plants, got my natives through our southern California summer, so I can recommend those as well.
I’ve just ordered the terracotta ones on Amazon I think I’ll use them on my tomatoes in grow bags because I didn’t have much luck last summer in grow bags, lost too much water too quickly
Thanks for the "tip" on the spikes! Appreciate you sharing! Cheers :)
That watering method is really, really old!
Here in spain people use old clay pots for that purpose. They seal the bottom hole, bury the pot and fill it with water, and then place a lid on top of it.
It works really great
Does it have to be fresh water or can you use a compost tea to have the extra stuff seep out too?
So there are no holes at all? The water goes through the clay wall of the pot? What if the pot is glazed, would that affect the water seeping through it?
@@AhrayahLaban People use fresh water usually
@@mbern4530Yeah it has to be an unglazed pot so the water 'sweats' through the pot if that makes sense
@@lectric Good to know, thanks!
I went to the website and for my 3'x8' raised beds the kit recommended was $109.95 US plus shipping. I have 6 beds so almost $700 for a watering system is a bit pricey for my tastes. I think I'm just going to stick with a nice relaxing evening of enjoying my garden and hand watering.
I prefer hand watering too, but I also use my ollas during the height of summer, so I'm also standing there with a hose filling up cheap, terra cotta pots (fixed to their bases).
My beds are 4x8 with 3 10" pots per bed (12 pots at $10 a pot, 7 years ago).
If it's not zone 8+ then you'll be digging them up every fall & putting them to bed so they don't break.
A good ground-cover and mulch also helps hold moisture in the soil while protecting the topsoil from being displaced.
I love using my homemade ones (made with clay pots and blu tac) to see how well my hand watering is going. If my olla is constantly empty than I’m not watering enough, if it’s always full than I’m watering too much and if it’s about half full than I’m watering the perfect amount.
Would love if you did a series on pest control. I've seen your previous videos on some of the stuff you do, but it would be really nice to see a multi-video series where you follow a few plants from seedling to harvest. Love your videos and keep up the good work !
I've used this method of watering in a section of my garden. The water comes from a rainwater collection tank that feeds to 6 olla per raised bed that are linked together trough weaping hose. I connected 3 raised beds together to the tank. The olla's are just 2 clay lots glued together with one end covered up. Works great!
I live in the desert. I used ollas in my first two 4x12 foot gardens (1.3x4 meters). They gave me confidence that I was watering my plants the right amount, and that let me focus on the other hazards that plague new gardeners. I had a blast and had a fun time with them. I've never been able to grow before, and this helped eliminate the hardest part for beginners like me. It's also twice as efficient as drip watering, which is good in drought areas.
On a different note, Spanish pronunciation is pretty straightforward, but a little odd for us who speak English. Here's some big highlights. The "ll" is said like a "y", the "h" is always silent, "v" is said like a "b", "j" is said like an "h". "C" is said like "s" if it's followed by an "e" or "i", and "qu" said like "k" if it's followed by an "e" or "i". Unless there's an accent (') on a syllable, put the emphasis on the second to last syllable. Lastly, and most importantly, the vowels are always pronounced the following way. "A" is said like "ah" (like in "lawn"), "e" is said like "ey" (like in "hey"), "i" is said like "ee" (like in "leak"), "o" is said like "oh" (like in "spoke"), and "u" is said like "ooh" (like in "book"). Once you know these rules, you can pronounce most words in Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, French, and Japanese (as written with English alphabet), with a few alterations to the rules.
This might work well for tomatoes because they benefit from constant but not to much water. You could also just put a put right next to each tomato plant
I have a couple terra cotta water spikes around my tomato plant this year and they really flourished!
This year has been my first year with an Olla and my tomatoes love it. Every year before, I'd gotten blossom end rot because I just couldn't get the watering schedule correct. This year, with the Olla, it's taken all of the guesswork out and I haven't gotten any blossom end rot (except for a tiny amount on a couple of my San Marzano tomatoes, but I think that's because we've gotten a TON of rain over the last couple of months).
Being in the uk this ain’t a problem at the moment but realistically this is a good tip for the future for alot of countries and folk. Cheers Mark. Your one of a good number of elite teachers which share their knowledge and kindness (in your case with a bit of cheekiness! Love it). Appreciated
Thank you! I'm not sure about "elite" but I appreciate you saying so and I do try my best... Cheers :)
We Aussies don't do 'elite' 😅
always a joy to learn about self sufficient gardening from australian russel crowe
I just bought some olla pots for my flower beds out front. We're in a severe drought here in Central Texas, so I was really lucky to see your recent video about this. The pots should be here soon. If they work well out front, I'll put them in the back butterfly gardens.
Houston area here.
The 110° F heat here killed most organic veggies the raccoon skipped in May, so not many ollas needed now.
Wondering how hot will the water get, the one in my hose comes out boiling at 7:00 pm.
I've used a similar set up with a clay pot to root cuttings.
I have about 3 purchased from a company. Then made some for my self from with pots from Bunnings. BEST THINGS EVER.
whenever i read „Save water“ ..
i think „shower with a friend“ !
the plants look awesome!
Our 2 new peonies were stressed due to the unusual heat we were having. I made 2 ollas from terracotta pots, (like the clip you inserted at 2:41, I siliconed a rock over the hole in the bottom, and placed the pot tray over the top) placing them behind the shrubs close to the base. It has made a tremendous difference in their health! I think a set-up like you received would be excellent for gardeners who vacation often or who just have a busy family schedule. 💕
Great information. Thank you. Don’t worry about the pronunciation. The important thing was in the information.
My terra cotta watering spikes I use in my potted plants work so well that I started using them in my tiny garden too. They are great. I love this system that ties them all together with one big water source!
I’ve been very interested in setting up an olla (pronounced oya) watering system here in hot ole Texas. It’s widely used in the southwest. Right now we have our little raised bed garden containers on micro drip/sprinklers set on the lawn irrigation system. But with literally months of temps in triple digits in Fahrenheit, my vegetation is showing signs of heat stress.
Try shade cloth over hoops to create a micro climate. I started this way until my grape vines covered the trellis. This trellis covers the driveway and I garden under it.
@@gregsanderson2470 I think I have just enough, 70% coverage it says, but I’m thinking they overcalucate.
@@sunnycharacter By using containers I move plants in or out of the shade. I can manage what the plants need. This only works for a very small garden.
@@gregsanderson2470 My raised bed garden consists of 6 very large round farm tubs, the kind that cattle grain snacks and molasses treats come in. Ave 25 in size and plenty big enough for everything from ginger, herbs, peppers, tomatoes, lettuce, cucumbers, even good for rearing my banana pups. I have even used them for sweet potatoes. My husband drilled holes in them, and at an unused sunny side of my backyard, he built a raised deck with benches to hold the tubs and added drip system. Being off the ground I can avoid rabbits, however the occasional squirrels may invade it. Very handy space when you live in the suburbs.
@@sunnycharacter Oh very nice. Due to an illness have had to scale back . Your set up sounds great! Will the hoop and netting work for you?
Ollas are great for water-scarce areas. I'll give a simple pronunciation tip to follow: double L in Spanish is pronounced like a J or a Y. So in future say it like Oya and it will sound great ;) long-time subscriber, love the content!
Thanks Mark. I've experimented with a similar system in a large pot with a tomatoe. Instead I used flexible tubing with the most tiniest holes punctured every say 40mm apart. I arranged it in a spiral configuration down the pot. Hooked up to a reservoir. Oh, I had another next to it that I hand watered. The tube watering tomatoe grow more quickly and more vibrant with better yeald. I'm disappointed with myself because I didn't record anything. I did give both an organic liquid fertilizer and gypsum. I cut the dosage of the tube feed by half as I thought it would block the holes. Which it did at the bottom ones. All in all a success I say. Maybe try a similar on in your beds. The thing you have to play with is the height of the reservoir. Higher more pressure, more water. ✌
I love the experimentation! Thanks for the tip on the reservoir height. Cheers :)
.44 psi per foot.
I purchased the Thirsty Earth system for my greenhouse beds. I have it connected to my outside faucet and it atomically fills the buckets. So far it has worked great. I enjoyed listening to you talk about your experience with them.
Good to hear you're happy with the system! Cheers :)
Thank you 🙏 Mark, always appreciate your honest opinion sharing your experiences and knowledge with us. 🙂
This would be good for people who's work takes too much time up, but want to grow. Set up before work and go 😊
I’ve punched tiny holes in the bottom & sides of sturdy plastic water or soda bottles & burying them next to seedlings when I plant them - cheaper alternative - can do with a circle of bottles around newly planted trees- some people bury the bottles upside down with a hole in the cap & a few tiny holes on the bottom half of the buried bottles & cut the bottoms of the bottles which is exposed above ground & filled with water from a hose😊
I'm wondering if this would decrease the the damage from slugs. Since the ground surface isn't as wet as when you water by hand, they might not come out or go for the watered plants as readily.
Lovely demonstration! I use terracotta vases in my fabric raised beds. I agree their reach is not very far. I lifted the vase and found the networks of roots in the shape of the pot. It was wild but they need to be right on top of it. Probably depends on the size of the olla but then you start to lose growing space. I agree this is fantastic for smaller pots that dry out quickly
Thank you for sharing!! 💕🌱
I’d love to know about your fabric raised beds!
@@gattamom Search for "grow bags"
I made some from two terra cotta pots and used silicone to stick them together. I was shocked how watertight they got. I ended up refilling mine every other day or so, but I love the idea of attaching it to its own reservoir (bucket). It's been great for areas that are too far away for my regular automatic drip irrigation.
Thank you for that video. It was interesting. I use a plastic bottle for my large hanging baskets. They are large wires with moss or 16" fiber pots. I put the cap on and slice about 4 or 5 cuts down the side of the bottle to allow the water to seep out, and cut off the bottom of the bottle. I put it upside down in the middle of the basket, and the bottom faces up. Plant the basket and you have a self watering pot. Just top it up with water. 😊
Oh awesome, I've been waiting for this review to come through! Thanks!
Thank you for sharing my go to Grower, I learn so much from you Cheers !!!!
I’m going to try make my own based on this concept! Thanx for the ideas Mark…these days we have got to be resourceful as possible!! ❤
Thank you for reviewing these products Mark. Excellent video.
Oh, yeah... Love the idea. May give it a try. Thanks, Mark!!
Wow Mark your garden is looking great.
Never heard of this Method before! Thank you Mark!!!
What a super idea. Great upload.
That’s a very cool system, but like Mark mentioned it would be pretty expensive to set up a large garden. I use buried drip tape in my garden and it works in a similar way although much faster. Very low pressure and the emitters put a tiny bit of water out and since it’s buried you don’t lose any as it’s delivered directly to the roots. I plant directly on top of it so it ensures all plants get adequate water.
This sounds interesting to alot of people who find terracotta pots expensive. Maybe Mark could try this and let us know the results. Please tell us more about the materials you use, the plants from your experience and anything else that could help people financially do well in gardening. Thanks for sharing 👍
Doesn’t it get clogged?
That's a good idea! Cheers mate :)
@@woodlandsartgal you would think so but no it doesn’t. It’s been designed to be buried and works great. Typically clogs are more of an issue if you are on well water and have a little sand in your water, easy fix is to run a filter after your pressure regulator and no issues.
Hey Mark, nice to see you come up in the feet on RUclips. That sounds like a great idea. Looks good.❤👍
me in utah - watching an aussie - learning about a company in utah to water my garden. love the internet lol
Nice looking veggies! Great video, thanks 👍
Great video, Mark! I've been looking at irrigation options for my little garden, and this will be #1 on my list next Spring.
Very interesting Mark. As always you do a great job in informing us and explaining.
You are helping and inspiring many many people. Me included. Cheers
Ron, Tasmania
That arugula looks luscious!
I was thinking about different options for that terra cota water system.
What if it was pipe ?
Pipes made out of the same stuff would work.
Really fragile but if thick enough could be solid enough.
3 to 4 pipes to water a bed .
Any system like this would be worth it , as long as it fits individual needs. You can see the difference big time.
Very nice plants ! Beautiful.
Very interesting experiment and helpful. Here in the desert of southern New Mexico USA I have been thinking of trying the Olla in my pots. Angela in Growing in the Garden RUclips in Arizona utilizes the Olla. Here we don’t pronounce the two l’s at all. Mesilla is pronounced me-si-a. Interesting the pronunciation in different localities.
How do you pronounce mellow yellow?
The most lovable gardener on RUclips!
You can glue the cracked one and if you have all the pieces of the other one too
Ah Festo, love their tubing stuff!
Sir thank you for sharing your horticultural expertise!🧐🤔👊👍
I think this would be perfect for my balcony garden! Thanks for the heads up!
I like to hand water. It allows me to check on the garden health amd any bad bugs around.
Thank you for doing the experiment and sharing the results with us.
Terrific video mate, thank you. I think you are right about the constant access to water on demand being at the 'root' of the good growth you saw. But the other half of the equation is oxygen: using this technique theoretically means your soil is rarely over-saturated with water (only after rainfall), meaning the roots have optimal access to water but also oxygen at almost all times. A winning combination for sure!
I have learned so much from your video's and can't thank you enough for posting them, I know we live in very different climates considering your in Australia and I'm in Virginia but your technics are priceless. I just ordered the Olla and can't wait for planting season this spring, I'm always looking for the best way to do my planting and I like using containers because I have limited mobility. Keep making the video's and I really need to learn more about how to raise chickens.
LOVE YOU MARK!!
Hi Mark, I have seen other videos on these. But yours was the best because you showed the results of your experiment. Really generous of you to put your money out there to show us a product and how it works to save us the expense. I'm going to give it a go.Thanks!!👍
I was just thinking of making my own ollas 3 days ago. Great video Mark
Thank you so much for sharing this video! And information, I greatly appreciate it!
I use Olla's in my fabric pots.
You're a good bloke!!!
Great ideas for olla use. We're in a very long drought here and I wish I had some for the fruit trees! Thank you for the testing data. 🌏
Love this channel ❤️ very informative and inspiring 👏
hmm, I may try these in my raised beds on a smaller scale. love the idea for my smaller raised beds that I am constantly watering.
Awesome content Mark. I'm definitely going to give this system a try in one of our raised beds next season seeing as rain here in Arkansas after a particular time in the summer can be hit or miss at our property. Thanks for the info. Getting into it👍
I'm always glad to see some of the Utah based things being used around the world. I just looked them up and they're only a couple of miles away from me!
Another great video Mark, I love your videos 💚🌿💯
What a wonderful idea!! We have watered through buried pvc pipes with small holes all around the lower section...but it all drains out into the deeper soil very fast. I love this idea!
I’ve been meaning to try a system like this out. Seems very beneficial
Thanks for that Mate Handy for those out of reach fruit trees or plants from the sprinkler
Mark- so glad you are trying this. I have used ollas for 3 years now and the plants that benefit have done so much better than others that I hand water in this hot summer!
Enjoyable presenter and always helpful content. You have a great sense of humor! and remind me of Jonathan Winters (comedian of many years back). Thanks for the information 😊👍🥬
Nifty! I already knew about ollas long since, but it had never occurred to me that they could be linked and automated!
I was thinking we need to explore more irrigation systems, I like the bucket idea
Interesting concept.🤔
Will look into it. Thanks mate. 👍
Amazing size of those lettuces on the system. Yes it is a little pricey though. (Would've helped if the system were better packaged for shipment so there'd be no breakage, especially at the price.) BTW gorgeous nasturtiums in the background🧡💛💚❤
I almost got my hands on quite a few Ollas this spring and I was so sad when I missed it.
Ps. Those nasturtiums are HUGE!
Thanks for doing this. Very interesting.
I bought this system for my containers on my deck. It’s fantastic! Especially when you go away for a week and don’t have anyone to take care of the watering!
With how hot is been in the climate this year this is a very good topic to bring up. I live in Northern Minnesota we have not had the 110 etc degree temperatures but, we also have not had very much rain, so I have been watering quite frequently. I have been researching ways to water more efficiently. And I am surrounded with more than 400 lakes in a 25-mile radius!
I’ve watched every episode ( some more than once ) of both your channels Mark and you never disappoint ! Excellent as always, best wishes to you and your family, from Britain 👍👍🇦🇺🇬🇧
Thanks for all your support! All the best to you and yours also mate. Cheers :)
Wow! Your supersized cos lettuce, I thought it was a cabbage its so big! Good on you for trying out a new system and sharing, not only the installation, but the comparitive outcomes. Really impressive stuff.
Hi Thank you for your posting and sharing your experience, I’ve experimented with Ollas and I use them throughout my garden I’ve put terracotta pots together and fill them accordingly they work fine I’ve put 3 and 4 together and buried them the plants love it they are an inexpensive way to set up your garden Great show !
so crazy, I revented this and have been working on a good way to get a seal on my ollas. perhaps I should buy one and see their construction.
Amazing difference
Lately, I have been looking into systems like this one, and I was surprised by the lack of growth the plants showed (8:00) in your testing, assuming they were planted at the same time as the pants in the middle row, especially considering that they don't appear to be planted far from the ollas. My guess is that the range around the ollas that is sufficiently moist is much shorter than advertised. Even 12 inches feels too far for annual plants with a limited root system, which would make this cost-prohibitive for more than 2-3 sqm. Receiving 10-20% of the ollas broken is another factor that lowers the value/cost ratio.
Nice idea and set up. We use olla type watering in northern New Mexico ( USA) it’s pronounced, oy-ah. Thank you for showing how well it works! Really enjoy watching your cast.
Welldone Brother !
your job is great ❤