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Managing Irrigation Schedules
We will be new the Villages in September in the Wellpoint area moving into a newly constructed home. We we only be there for periodic vacations. I see from the Declaration of Covenants, Conditions... that we are requried to follow the allowed irrigation schedule from the GPWCA. Can anyone describe to me how we can expect that will work - does the builder have a controller with scheduling capability? Do we need to put in place a phone based controller so that we can manage it remotely while away? Any advice is greatly appreciated as we plan to set up our new home.
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Your irrigation controller box will be in the garage. Instructions including run times and days to water will be on the outside of the box cover. If you need help, your builder rep will walk you through it.
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Good luck and welcome home. |
We replaced our Hunter controller with a Rachio. The Rachio connects to the internet and I can control from my phone and easily set schedules. It can also stop irrigation if it rains so you’re not watering while it’s raining. It has worked great so far!
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The decision probably comes down to price. The Hunter wifi module alone may be cheaper than the Rachio controller. but if you first need to upgrade your Hunter controller to accept the module then the Rachio may be the less expensive way to go. |
Thanks to all for the help...
That's exactly what I was looking for - thanks very much for all the replies!
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Irrigation has rain sensor, it’s supposed to shut water off when raining or if rained enough to alter schedule. Don’t get no simpler than that.
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Irrigation Controller
We had the Hunter controller and it was cumbersome to use with wi-fi and never worked very well. It would run even when rain was predicted or it had rained that day.
We switched to Rachio and found it to be a MUCH better system for us. It ties into our local area weather forecast in TV (and will soon be connected to the weather station we’re installing) for even more accurate performance. We saved over $1,000 in irrigation bills our first year (and > 100,000 gallons of water) vs the Hunter system. No more $200/mo. irrigation bills for our 1/4 ac property. They’re now between $0 - $50/mo with Rachio. We’ve saved even more ($ and water) this year with the new AI features they’ve downloaded to the system, making it even more efficient. I think the 8 zone Rachio system controller was $160 and was very simple to install, taking about 20 mins. |
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Set. Most of of these complaints about Hunter are due to operator’s lack of knowledge in not setting the Advanced settings and features. It does everything the Rachio does. When you first move in you’ll need to keep an increased water schedule with new grass until its roots get established. St Augustine needs DEEP watering. In the summer most people I know water 50-60 minutes twice a week, and for these hottest months add a third day of 15 minutes to help get through those long gap days. You’ll see St Augustine stress by wilting and folding its blades which causes a shadow on your lawn in that area. Ultimately if that keeps happening it kills the grass. St Augustine also gets stressed if cut too short. Unfortunately most grass services cut too short. Don’t cut under 3.5”, preferably 4”. Also, fungus brown patch and chinch bugs can kill your grass within a week if you aren’t proactive on insecticide and fungicide. Services are reactive instead of proactive. Don’t wait until you have a problem. |
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Watering any later in the day and more water would be lost to evaporation than what gets to the roots. Watering at night leads to mold and fungal issues as the blades of grass are constantly wet. |
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