I like to keep the garden watered, but it's boring. It's wasteful to use an oscillating sprinkler on the raised veggie beds because of the walkways between them, and the flowerbeds are too narrow for one. It is too boring to just stand there and water all the beds by hand. I have drip irrigation hoses, but they all broke off at the raised brass couplings under the weight of the snow 2 winters ago (haven't quite figured out how to repair them).
I had developed a rather convenient way to water them all a patch at a time using a fat hose nozzle and a spading fork. I stabbed the fork in the ground abut 10' away and nestled the fat hose nozzle (shower setting) in the fork's D handle. But that required getting the garden fork firmly in the ground at each 6' section or raised bed. Naturally, if I needed to water the beds, the lawn soil was rather hard to penetrate with the fork.
I needed a better way. My first thought was a pole with a clamp on top and a flat "X" at the bottom with spikes to "step" into the lawn. I couldn't find any parts like that, and I'm not a welder. Then I looked at my camera tripod. It looked a bit flimsy, needed some kind of attachment at the top, and I wasn't sure how waterproof it was. But a tripod seemed the way to go.
I built one using pressure treated wood and stainless steel hardware. The PT wood is 2x2"deck balusters. The tripod is designed with 1 forward and 2 back legs. It is 2 back legs to resist the backwards force of the water and the weight of the hose.
The balusters come with pointed ends. I wanted the points for the bottoms, but I wanted flat tops to attach a nozzle platform. So I cut off the tops of each of the 3 balusters. Then I cut 3" off the 2 back legs to use to widen the attachment surface. Two pieces of scrap wood added some width. It was all glued and screwed to the front leg.
Next, I used a tapering jig on the tablesaw to cut angles for the 2 back legs to attach to the front leg. They are shorter because I used 3" to make the top attachment surfaces, but also because the front needs to be longer to create an upwards angle for the nozzle platform. That will make more sense in the last pictures. I can't give an exact angle for the cut (I really just overlayed one on the other and eyeballed the "right" spread). It looks about 30 degrees though.
I needed to drill a hole through the 3 legs for an axle bolt. I rigged up some stops and supports on my drill press for the 2 angled back legs. The front leg just needed a spacer to account for the platform support.
It looks like this when the bolt and nut is put through all 3 legs. This holds the legs all at the angles. But I also wanted to be able to store it easily for the winter. That meant being able to collapse it. So I took the back legs back to the drill press and lifted them up slightly to angle the holes.
I may not be explaining that well. To store it, I wanted the 3 legs to compress flat to each other, and the lengthened hole allowed that. And so that the bolthead and wing nut (for tightening securely on a flat surface, I used a forstener bit to make an angled hole the size of the flat washers. I don't have a picture of that, but it will be obvious when/if you make one of these yourself.
Notes: 1, The washers between the legs were removed later. I realized I DIDN'T want the legs to slide easily when being set up. 2, The spacer washers below the wing nut are there because the wing nut catches on the wood before the bolt is tight. 3, Use a bolt with threads the whole length. The bolts with about 1" of threads don't have enough thread length.
Here is the tripod in the storage position. That's what I mean by "compressing flat" and why the back legs have elongated holes.
Here is the tripod set up, minus the hose nozzle platform on top... You can see that with the front leg longer, it creates an upwards angle.
Here is the finished tripod. A piece of PT board is glued an screwed to the platform support on the front leg (the screws are countersunk under the wand nozzle). Copper clamp-downs hold the wand in place with pan-head exterior screws. A wand nozzle is much easier to attach than a standard nozzle. The wand, BTW, has the most uniform spray of any nozzle I have ever tried. This brand is Melcor; others may be just as good.
To relieve hose-weight pressure on the wand, I attached an angled hose connector. I have quick-connect attachments on all my hoses and attachments.
And here is the watering tripod in action! Adjusting the angle of the front leg easily adjusts the angle of spray.
It's easy to move from spot to spot, stores nicely, and should last decades!
5 comments:
You is so smart Big Thing.
This is fascinating! How do you feel about making a few more and offering them for sale, for us-who-are-not-handy? I'm pretty sure I'd want to buy one next spring, after I (hopefully) move.
On a hot day I think I would be in front of it, not the garden!
MTVA - If you are serious, email me at cavebear-2118 AT comcast DOT net. I could make a 2nd one. Better than the first, probably, because I know the mistakes I made the 1st time around.
Derby and Ducky - Thank you! I am creative and resourceful, but a rough carpenter at best. I just get ideas and try my best at them. Some fail. Some don't.
FWIW, if you have any kind of 'farm & home' store in your area, drop in there next time you're close. They usually have fitting to repair garden hoses. No idea if someone like Loews or Home Depot would have that sort of thing or not.
No guarantees, but it can't hurt to check.
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