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Michelle In The Meadow

Zone 9A Suburban Garden

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My Irrigation Worries Are OVER (almost). ‪@epicgardening‬

May 23, 2026 by Michelle Leave a Comment

Michelle in the Meadow tagged products below. Learn more:

Epic Garden Watering System: Starter Kit Limited shipping areas
Epic Garden Watering System: Expansion Kit Limited shipping areas



🛒 Shop Epic Gardening Memorial Day Sale — Ends May 28:
https://michelleinthemeadow.com/epic
Use code MEADOW at checkout for up to 45% total savings

#epicgardening ‪@epicgardening‬

I got two phone calls from my neighbor in less than a week asking the same question — why is water coming from my yard into theirs? Completely my fault. Multiple irrigation systems, different flow rates, a broken timer, zero coordination. Water chaos. But that's ending.

Epic Gardening just released their own drip irrigation kit and I pre-ordered mine immediately. One kit, one timer, one flow rate — fits any raised bed from 2 to 4 feet wide and up to 10 feet long. The adjustable manifold is the part that got me. No more mismatched systems, no more apologetic phone calls.

I also share what I learned about hydrophobic soil — what happens when beds sit dormant after frost and why your water may be running straight through without doing anything useful. Spoiler: spray the beds down manually first before you run your irrigation system.

The kit is on pre-order now during the Epic Gardening Memorial Day Sale — 40% off raised beds and 25-30% off everything else through May 28th. My code MEADOW stacks on top for up to 45% total savings.


⏱️ Timestamps:
0:00
The neighbor phone calls
0:16
The irrigation chaos explained
1:29
Epic Gardening's new drip kit — pre-order during Memorial Day Sale
2:03
Different flow rates — why mismatched systems cause problems
2:42
Hydrophobic soil — what it is and how to fix it
3:23
The fix and what's coming next
3:46
In the meantime — keeping the beds watered
4:20
Next video


🌱 RESOURCES MENTIONED:
🛒 Epic Gardening Memorial Day Sale: https://michelleinthemeadow.com/epic — code MEADOW
🧮 Soil Calculator for Raised Beds: https://michelleinthemeadow.com/soil-calculator-for-raised-beds/


🌿 ABOUT MICHELLE IN THE MEADOW
Gardening tips, honest failures, and real results from Zone 9b Northeast Florida. I grow a lot of Asian vegetables, maintain a food forest in progress, and share what actually works in a Florida garden — including what doesn't.

📍 Zone 9b — Northeast Florida
📅 Monthly Live Stream — First Sunday 7PM Eastern


📲 FIND ME HERE:
🌐 Website: https://www.michelleinthemeadow.com
📸 Instagram: / michelleinthemeadow
📘 Facebook: / michelleinthemeadow


🔗 This video: • My Irrigation Worries Are OVER (almost). @…


💧 DRIP IRRIGATION FOR RAISED BEDS — COMMON QUESTIONS

What is the best drip irrigation system for raised garden beds?

The best system fits your beds, runs on a timer, and maintains a consistent flow rate across everything. Mixed systems with different flow rates create uneven watering and chaos on one line. A kit designed specifically for raised beds with an adjustable manifold solves this.

How long should I run drip irrigation on raised beds?

Short frequent cycles work better than one long one. Run 10 to 15 minutes two or three times rather than one long cycle. This lets water penetrate the soil surface before the next cycle starts — especially important on dry or hydrophobic soil.

Why is my raised bed soil repelling water?

Hydrophobic soil. It happens when beds dry out completely — often after winter — and soil particles develop a waxy coating that repels water. Signs: water beads on the surface or runs straight through. Fix: manually spray the bed down thoroughly, wait, spray again, repeat over several days. A diluted drop of dish soap breaks surface tension. Compost top dressing helps long term.

What causes hydrophobic soil in raised beds?

Soil drying out completely during winter or a dry spell. Organic matter develops a water-repelling waxy coating when it dries out. Peat moss is a common culprit — retains water when moist but is very hard to rehydrate once dry. Solution is slow rehydration over several days.

Do I need a filter for drip irrigation?

Yes. A sediment filter protects emitters from clogging. Without one, mineral deposits will eventually block the tiny emitter holes and you will get uneven watering. A good kit should include a filter as standard.

Can drip irrigation work on different sizes of raised beds?

Yes — if the kit has an adjustable manifold. A fixed manifold only fits one bed width. An adjustable manifold that fits 2 to 4 feet wide means one kit works across your whole collection regardless of brand or style.


Disclosure: Some links are affiliate links. If you purchase through my link or code you won't pay a penny more — but I earn a small commission that helps me keep making free content. Thank you for supporting Michelle in the Meadow. 💚

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