Winter Irrigation
"We don't
need to irrigate, it's winter."
This is a commonly held idea, and many years it is true. Adequately timed rains will often meet the
needs of avocado trees during the winter period, and in times like last year,
even satisfy much of the spring requirement.
However, in a
low rainfall year, irrigation can be as necessary as at other times of the
year. This is because a subtropical
evergreen like avocado continues to use water regardless of rainfall
patterns. At the time of writing this
article in December, it appears we will be having a low rainfall year.
The driving
forces for plant water use are light intensity, wind and relative humidity, as
well as temperature. Remember how cold,
dry winds can dry your skin or freeze-dry backpack food. Even during the winter, the trees are quite
capable of losing large amounts of water with clear skies and cold winds.
Dry Santa Ana
conditions are also more common in winter than in the past. During the winter of 1991 during a time of
drought, I went out to see an orchard to evaluate it for thinning. On arrival, my first concern was for the
water stress in the trees. The grower,
however, was unconcerned. The trees had
been dutifully irrigated the previous Friday.
But over the weekend, a Santa Ana had blown for three days and
completely dried the soil in the top 10 inches.
Digging around the roots convinced the grower of water stress. Do not take irrigation for granted.
Contributing
to the problem is the determination of what amount of rainfall is
effective. Effective rainfall is defined
as the amount of water that is retained in the root zone after rain. Avocados, especially on shallow soils, do not
have much of a root zone. Most soils can
be expected to hold about 2 inches of available water in the top 2 feet, less
the more sandy, more the more heavy.
If rainfall
exceeds the holding capacity within the root zone, it is lost to the
plant. Just imagine if all the year's
expected rain fell during one storm. It
would not be long before irrigation would be required with no more rain
coming. The extra water may, however,
perform the all-necessary function of leaching accumulated salts from the root
zone.
When the rain
gauge says that 3 inches fell, it is quite possible that all that rain will not
be available to the tree. This also goes
for the quarter inch storms we get that do not even make it through the leaf
litter. It is not effective rainfall,
even though it may wash the persea mite off the leaves.
One of the
best ways to assess the effectiveness of rainfall within the root zone is with
tensiometers. These trusty instruments
are most commonly used to schedule irrigations.
A good rainfall should return the 8- and 24-inch depth gauges to close
to 0 cbars. This will tell you whether
the rain thoroughly wetted the root zone.
It will not tell you how much may have passed through the root zone,
however.
If you are
using soil sampling to assess the depth of rain infiltration, simply squeezing
a handful of soil can help. Regardless
of soil texture, a wetted soil will form a ball or cast when thoroughly
wetted. Water moves as a front through
the soil. After a rain, take soil
samples with depth to find where the potential to form a ball abruptly
ends. This will tell you the depth of
effective rain.
How well a
soil holds together can also be an indication of when to irrigate. Even a sandy loam texture will retain a ball
that does not hold together well when there is still adequate moisture for the
tree. The possibility of forming a ball
decreases with water content. When
visible cracking of a soil ball is obvious, it is time to irrigate.
Winter
irrigation is something we do not commonly perform, but in low rainfall years
it is an activity we should consider.