Water Smarter, Not Harder
A properly planned irrigation system saves 50% of water usage, eliminates daily hand watering, and keeps every plant in your garden perfectly hydrated.
Why it works
Hand watering is inefficient (50% evaporates before reaching roots), inconsistent (too much here, too little there), and time-consuming. A planned irrigation system delivers the right amount of water directly to root zones, on a schedule that matches plant needs. Drip irrigation reduces water use by 30–50% compared to sprinklers and eliminates wet foliage that promotes fungal disease. Smart controllers adjust watering based on weather, soil moisture, and evaporation rates — saving even more.
How to achieve this look
Map your garden zones by water needs: high-water (vegetables, new plantings), medium-water (established perennials, lawns), and low-water (Mediterranean plants, succulents, established trees). Assign each zone its own irrigation line. Use drip irrigation for beds and borders — 1/2-inch mainline with 1/4-inch spaghetti tubes to individual plants or inline drip tape for rows. Use pop-up sprinklers only for lawn areas. Install a timer (basic) or smart controller (adjusts for weather). Add a rain sensor to prevent watering during rain. Bury mainlines 6 inches deep or hide under mulch. Test the system before planting — fix leaks on empty beds, not around established plants.
While Arden focuses on visual garden design, planning irrigation alongside layout ensures every plant gets the water it needs. Design your dream garden with Arden, then build the irrigation to support it.
"Finally an app that understands outdoor spaces. Every garden plan turned out beautiful."
-- Priya K.
Häufige Fragen
Q1 Is drip irrigation better than sprinklers?
For beds and borders, yes — drip delivers water directly to roots with minimal evaporation and no wet foliage. For lawns, sprinklers are still the practical choice. Most gardens benefit from drip for beds plus sprinklers for turf.
Q2 Can I install drip irrigation myself?
Absolutely. Drip systems are designed for DIY installation — they use push-fit connectors, cut-to-length tubing, and no special tools. A basic system for a medium garden costs $50–150 in materials and takes a weekend to install.
Q3 How often should I water my garden?
Deep, infrequent watering (2–3 times per week) encourages deep root growth. Daily light watering creates shallow roots and disease-prone plants. Adjust by season: more in summer heat, less in cool weather, almost never in winter for established plants.
Q4 What is a smart irrigation controller?
A Wi-Fi-connected controller that adjusts watering schedules based on local weather data, soil type, and plant needs. It skips watering when rain is forecast and increases watering during heat waves. Brands like Rachio and Hunter Hydrawise are popular.