How to use soil moisture sensors successfully – Baseline Systems BaseStation 1000 User Manual

Page 10

Advertising
background image

BaseStation 1000 Irrigation Controller Manual

How to Use Soil Moisture Sensors Successfully

The first key for success with soil moisture sensors is to identify the hydrozones that exist in your

landscaping. A hydrozone is a grouping of plants that have similar water usage and delivery

characteristics and can be watered the same. For example, each of the following landscaping areas

is a separate hydrozone:

Grass in full sun with rotors

Grass in full sun with sprays

Drip zones in full sun

Grass in shade with rotors

Grass in shade with sprays

Drip zones in shade

With a BaseStation 1000 (base model), you can install up to 10 soil moisture sensors, and then you

associate each sensor with a program.

In order to get the most benefit from your soil moisture sensors, Baseline recommends that you

identify the hydrozones in your landscaping, determine which irrigation zones are used to water

those hydrozones, and then consider how you can “group” the irrigation zones based on their

common characteristics.

Note: In the BaseStation 1000, you group zones by setting up runtimes for the related zones in a

single program. Then make sure that those zones do not have runtimes in any other programs.

Refer to Setting Up Zone Runtimes for a Program on page 39.

For example, you can group zones that:

Require irrigation on the same frequency (for example, on the same days)

Have similar plant types (such as zones that water turf, shrubs, or trees)

Do not have excessive differences in sun or wind exposure

Are irrigated with similar water application technologies (assuming zones meet the criteria

above)

You can group spray, rotor, and multi-stream zones, as long as the application rate varies less

than 10%. You can also put drip zones into one group, and subsurface drip zones into another

group.

After you have grouped your zones, install one soil moisture sensor in a representative area for

each group.

Consider the following example of a sports park that has four baseball fields and four soccer fields

in addition to some perimeter and parking lot shrub areas.

The irrigation manager for the park wants to water the infield areas of the baseball fields

differently from the outfields. The manager puts the zones that water the infields of all four

baseball diamonds into one program that is monitored by a single soil moisture sensor in one of the

infields.

Page 4

Advertising