Texas Heat!

   / Texas Heat! #331  
I keep trying to get myself to go fishing, but have constant "flashbacks" of the last time I went and it hit 106* . Used to go night fishing allot when I was younger, but really never thought of the heat as much when I was a kid it seems like.

Yep, my Dad & I used to go night fishing under Tucker's Tower at Lake Murray (Ardmore, OK), then I used to go camp on one of the islands in Lake Texoma and run a trotline every couple of hours, and I've even spent the night fishing here at Lake Lewisville a few times, but I don't think I've done any night fishing in the last 25-30 years.

And right now the heat is too much for me to go fishing day or night. I always heard that the heat hurts old folks more, and now I know that to be a fact.:laughing:
 
   / Texas Heat!
  • Thread Starter
#332  
And right now the heat is too much for me to go fishing day or night. I always heard that the heat hurts old folks more, and now I know that to be a fact.:laughing:

Bird, your not "old", just "seasoned":thumbsup::laughing:

I have always been heat sensitive, I mean really hate the heat. For me it is a project killer. When I was a kid I would put my blanket in moms deep freezer before I went to bed, ironically on the world news 2 nights ago, they where recommending putting your sheets in the freezer for 2 hrs prior to going to bed. I looked at my wife and said "TOAD YA!!" . I usually fiddle around in the heat and get caught up in what I'm doing and get over heated, more when I was a kid. Now for the most part I take it easy and try to drink more water.

If I could live where it's 60-70 degrees during the day and 40-50's at night, that would be heaven.
 
   / Texas Heat! #333  
Dennis, I was 17 before we ever had a deep freeze, but hadn't heard of putting the sheets in one.:laughing: When I was a kid out in the country at Healdton, OK, I acquired an old army cot, which I set up in the back yard in the summer, and I helped my sisters move their regular bed out there many times when it was cooler outside at night than in the house.

I've always disliked the hot weather, but it was only uncomfortable, didn't really bother me a lot until the last year or two. I stayed outside most of the morning today; not really working, just fiddling around, filling the bird feeder, repairing a garden hose (after I broke the female end off of it), and hand watering the yard, and when I came in around 11:30 a.m. I was soaked with perspiration.
 
   / Texas Heat! #334  
Supply and demand?
Wow, look what has happenned to the Rainbird price since Jim got his.
Looks like 4 would max me out if there were no friction loss.
156 GPH x 4 units= 624 GPH My pump is rated at 10 GPM, which I've never tested but doubt if the actual would be that high by the time it got to the sprinkler heads. Looks more like 3 heads max. if lucky!
Ron
 
   / Texas Heat!
  • Thread Starter
#335  
Ron, we had a set up one time on a well we had. I had a 1000 gallon storage tank the well pumped into, then I put a jet pump from the tank to supply the farm. With this set up I was able to use allot of water until the tank got super low, which only happened once when the tank float stuck.

My brother has a set up like this now and runs sprinkler systems in his house, my moms and cousins houses.

I want to do something like that and also try to use rain water run off if I actually get around to putting one in.
 
   / Texas Heat! #337  
Dennis,
I was just thinking outloud. Years ago I thought about installing an inground
sprinkler system and decided it was not a good idea since the problems with
a somewhat fixed nozzle layout with even and/or controlled area water distribution once trenched and buried plus the maintenance of the clogged/worn/stuck multiple nozzles, setting up controls for different season water requirements and draining the system for winter was a lot more hassle than just dragging a few hoses around when needed with a choice of various portable sprinkler heads on the end. My recent research and the info from this forum has not changed my opinion.
The so called " Tuna can test" is just as important, if not more so, for an inground system to see if the nozzles are getting the amount of water that is needed to the grass and not wasting water by putting on too much in some areas.
We collect a tremdous amount of water from our barn roofs for watering the orchids and other inside plants that my wife messes with all year round and bring barrels of it into the garage for winter storage and use.
And then, there's always the pond for grey water. I could rig a jet pump down there and run off a portable generator when needed. As I recall from a jet pump my dad had on a shallow well years ago, maintaining the prime was the only trick.
We were blessed with 1.54" of rain yesterday so the hoses are rolled back up in the barn.
Ron
 
   / Texas Heat! #338  
You do need to have at least a little knowledge/expertise to install a sprinkler system. I helped a friend/neighbor install one several years ago, but he had someone in the business draw up the plans, then he and I went and bought the material and rented a ditchwitch. And the guys who drew up the plans then came to help and the 4 of us installed 6 zones with timer and it came out well. However, in 1977 we had a neighbor buy a new house 2 doors from us and he installed a sprinkler system himself. It didn't last long because he ran PVC only 2 or 3 inches deep and made no provision for draining it. So that winter, I think the PVC shattered thoughout the system.
 
   / Texas Heat! #339  
Supply and demand?
Wow, look what has happenned to the Rainbird price since Jim got his.

Ron, the sprinkler I bought from Rainbird is not on that chart. This is the one from Amazon, but I bought them at Lowes for just over $6 each instead of the high online price. I guess they have to make that shipping cost up somewhere, but these are far cheaper at Lowes than any online source. I have the bases to screw these into and they are also $6 each. That makes my total investment in each sprinkler a bit under $13.
 
   / Texas Heat! #340  
Bird,
7 generations of doing things, not quite the best sometimes, has taught me a lot and primarily to figure out the pros vs the cons ahead of time. Waiting for years for the weeds to recover over the ditching as well as getting the settlement level again over the pipelines is another negative factor.
Jim,
That was a Lowes add from my nearest zip code. I think they planted a cookie in my normal browser so I went to another browser. It doesn't look like the PR-5 is available at Lowes any more. Not available at rainbow.com either so it may be an old model. Plenty of them available over internet stores though.
Ron
 

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