connect a hose to an IBC tote

   / connect a hose to an IBC tote #1  

Buxus

Silver Member
Joined
Nov 20, 2012
Messages
182
Location
Maryland
Tractor
Kubota M7060
I have about 100 trees I plan to plant in remote spots on my property. I have grown them for two seasons in my nursery and they are about 3-4 feet tall. My experience has been that by planting in September the plants need minimal irrigation, but not zero irrigation. I usually just turn a hose on low volume and run it for about 15-30 minutes at the base of each.

In order to use a hose for these I'd have to run over 1000 feet of hose to some of them. I am thinking of using IBC totes on my forks and just setting one on the ground next to each grove of plants and let the water gravity-feed each plant from a hose connected to the IBC tote.

I have never seen an IBC tote up close. Is there an easy way to connect a garden hose? Do I need to epoxy a hose bib into the opening? Any ideas welcome.
 
   / connect a hose to an IBC tote #2  
Never used any myself but the totes I've seen are usually fitted with a ball valve. You should be able to find a reducer/adapter to fit and use as you want. Here is a site listing some IBC Tote valves.

tote-valve.jpg
 
   / connect a hose to an IBC tote #3  
If the tote doesn't have an existing place to connect, get a bulkhead fitting in the size you want and connect your own valve.

Just drill a hole and use a stiff wire to feed the inside part of the fitting into place, then screw the outside nut on. There's a gasket for the inside, so you should be able to keep the inside piece from spinning.

Amazon.com: Lifegard Aquatics 3/4-Inch Double Threaded Bulkhead: Pet Supplies
 
   / connect a hose to an IBC tote #4  
They usually have a valve and NPT male connection (2”). A couple of adapters from Homer and a hose bib you’re good to go. Just made one myself for refilling my buckthorn sprayer.
 
   / connect a hose to an IBC tote #5  
I use IBC totes for irrigation on my gardens. Most of the IBC totes have a valve with a 2" quick connect fitting. Some have a valve with a 2" NPT thread. You can get adapters to connect them a garden hose on FleaBay or Amazon.
 
   / connect a hose to an IBC tote #6  
We plant a lot of trees for shelterbelts. I started out setting two totes on a hay rack and then dragging hoses around to the trees. All the totes I've seen have a valve or a provision for one.

My current set up uses a 3/4" electric solenoid valve. I have a small loader with forks and I wired up a momentary push button switch. So now I can drive up to the tree, hit the switch for about 15 seconds, and drive on.
 
   / connect a hose to an IBC tote #7  
I have a handful of PVC fittings glued together to reduce size. I assume its 2" NPT, but havent bothered remembering since I built it a few years ago. Ends in a brass hose spiggot.
 
   / connect a hose to an IBC tote #8  
My current set up uses a 3/4" electric solenoid valve. I have a small loader with forks and I wired up a momentary push button switch. So now I can drive up to the tree, hit the switch for about 15 seconds, and drive on.


I do this too, but with out the valve, I’ll have to add that to mine. I use 5 and 2-1/2 gallon buckets setting next to the plants with a small hole in the bottom, just fill the bucket and move on , the small hole let’s the water run out very slow so it soaks in and not run off.
 
   / connect a hose to an IBC tote #9  
I'm with countryb on this. Gravity fed takes a lot of your time and most of the water will run off. Put a 3/16 hole in the side of a 5 gallon bucket and up a few inches from the bottom. The water that remains in the bucket will make it more likely to stay put when the wind blows. Or put a big rock in the bucket to accomplish the same thing.

I tried your plan for watering 235 new potted trees for my windbreak years ago. It might be good for you but it wasn't good for me.

I ended up finding some free mulch to put around the trees and did the watering with a 330 gallon water tank, 12 volt bilge pump that I dropped in it with a short garden hose and a toggle switch to shut it off when moving to the next tree.
 
   / connect a hose to an IBC tote #10  
I run around with a 300 gallon tank on a 2 wheel trailer and use a 1-1/2 sump pump hose for my mulched trees. I carry a dozen 5-6 gallon buckets with a 3/8" hole in the bottom edge. The hose is big enough to fill the buckets fairly quick. Still, it is a lot of moving buckets from tree to tree but if I just left a bucket at a tree the hole would plug up to easy and i would be unplugging it all the time. Interesting thread and am looking to make my system even easier.
 
   / connect a hose to an IBC tote #11  
I run around with a 300 gallon tank on a 2 wheel trailer and use a 1-1/2 sump pump hose for my mulched trees. I carry a dozen 5-6 gallon buckets with a 3/8" hole in the bottom edge. The hose is big enough to fill the buckets fairly quick. Still, it is a lot of moving buckets from tree to tree but if I just left a bucket at a tree the hole would plug up to easy and i would be unplugging it all the time. Interesting thread and am looking to make my system even easier.

Next time, put the hole on the side of the bucket.
 
   / connect a hose to an IBC tote #13  
I use an IBC tote and plumbed it to a 12v on demand pump. From there it's connected to a normal hose. I squeeze the hose nozzle and the pump self primes and pumps at around 40psi. Plenty of pressure. I tow the IBC on a trailer and pull it with the Polaris side x side. Longest time spent is filling up the IBC.
 
   / connect a hose to an IBC tote #15  
If it has the camlock fitting you can get a male camlock to female NPT and reduce it down to accept a hose bib.
 
   / connect a hose to an IBC tote #16  
If I remember right, there are three different set-ups for IBC totes. Camlock, 2"NPT and some square thread.

I got a 2" NPT to 3/4" hose thread adapter off of Amazon...not the cheapest but was the easiest for 2A.M. shopping! Wherever I got mine from had adapters for all three set-ups.
 
   / connect a hose to an IBC tote
  • Thread Starter
#17  
Wow! I love this site! So many great ideas I had not even considered. I simply hoped to find out how to connect a hose. Had not even thought about all the other options. Thank you, thank you, thank you!
 
   / connect a hose to an IBC tote #18  
I also found an adapter for my tote. Volume through a water hose is no problem; you'll have plenty of pressure. Here's a picture of my adapter.DSCN0225.JPG
 
   / connect a hose to an IBC tote #19  
This is what I have for water supply in the back 40. Bought a rubber tub and put a kitchen sink strainer drain in it. So when it rains it goes straight to the tote. 5 gal. bucket fits under the spigot.20180827_170752.jpeg
 
   / connect a hose to an IBC tote #20  
We catch rain water from the garage and shop into 2 330 gal containers for watering the grass. Fittings into the ball valves were under 10 bucks at the local industrial supply house. Aluminum is cheaper than the plastic ones. I found an old swimming pool pump on Craigslist, hooked a 2"gise into it and came our with the 3/4" spigot head. Great for watering the lawn and flower beds. I use my skid steer to move a full tote to the garden and use a 2000 watt 12 V DC to 120 V AC inverter to run the pump at the garden.
 

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