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Trickle irrigation: the water needs of young peach trees

AG0193
Peter Jerie, Tatura
September, 1994

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Young peach trees can grow vigorously when irrigated regularly. However, too much water will retard their growth and can often kill them. Therefore, a knowledge of the water needs of young trees will help you to get maximum growth of trees under trickle irrigation without the risk of waterlogging. It is hard to predict the water needs of young, rapidly-growing peach trees. A peach tree may grow to eight to 10 times its size at planting by the end of its first season in the orchard. The tree grows most rapidly around the middle of summer when the weather is hot, just when water is needed to compensate for the heat as well as to provide for growth. Thus, you need some idea of the changing size of the tree and some measurement of the climate to use trickle irrigation successfully.

Measuring the size of a tree

The butt of the tree is an accurate measure of tree size, while evaporation from an exposed water surface gives a good indication of what effect the weather has on the tree's need for water. Determine the water use of a young tree by recording the area of the butt, calculated from the butt circumference, and by using a class A pan evaporimeter, a meteorological instrument, to measure evaporation. Young peach trees need 2 to 3.5 litres of water for each square cm of butt area after every 10 mm of evaporation. Trees available from nurseries generally vary greatly in size. The water requirement of a young tree depends directly on its size, so planting blocks of uniform trees simplifies management of trickle irrigation. The bigger nursery trees are preferable because the bigger the tree at planting, the bigger it will be at the end of the season, if it gets enough water.

Water needs in the first year

As mentioned before, some idea of the size of the trees is needed for successful irrigation. Measure the butts of a few average-sized trees soon after planting. A tree with a butt size close to 30 mm in circumference needs about 4.5 litres of water per week in cool to mild November weather. The tree needs 23 litres of water a week if the butt size is nearer 75 mm. Table 1 shows the water needs of trees whose butt sizes range between these two figures. The rates may double if, as often happens in northern Victoria, a hot spell occurs in late spring. Evaporation figures and daily temperatures are a regular feature on radio and TV news bulletins and it pays to keep a note of these figures. The 4.5 litres and 23 litres mentioned as the water requirements of two possible sizes of peach trees at planting are based on a weekly evaporation figure of 25 mm. This figure can double in hot weather.

Do not wait for the soil to dry out before starting to irrigate but start in late October or early November after two weeks without rain. Growth in the first year is slow early in the season and increases rapidly by mid-season. Change the watering rates more often as the season progresses. Measure the butts of a few trees again during January, when the water requirements of trees normally increase steeply along with increasing growth rate, to make certain that they are getting the right amount of water. Failure to adjust the rate of watering when the butt is either larger or smaller than that anticipated in Table 1 can result in either under-watering or over-watering.

When to water

Applying the right amount of water when the trees are watered daily, or at least every second day, gives the most benefit. A time clock is needed to do this successfully. A time clock also makes watering at night possible. Watering at night results in wider wetting patterns and wider areas of active root growth. The tree stops absorbing water from the sod after sunset and the water supplied then merely wets the ground. The dense mat of roots near the trickle outlets absorb most of the water applied in the day during midsummer, so less water is available to wet the soil and a small wetting pattern results.

Trickle irrigation is designed to apply water regularly but some period of drainage is needed between irrigations. The poorer the drainage, the longer the time needed, and 16 hours of drainage per day may be needed in the Goulburn Valley Irrigation Area. Table 1 gives a simple guide to the trickle irrigation needs of peach trees in the first year in the orchard. The trees must be growing vigorously if this table is used, otherwise the predicted figures will result in over-watering and, on poorly-drained soil death of the trees.

Inspect trees at least once a week. Look at the tips of the tree. Probe around outlets if the leaves stop expanding from the tips before March. You will probably find a wide wetting pattern with little resistance to the probe. Stop watering until the wetting pattern retracts, then start again but at a lower rate chosen from the table (that is, a fortnight or month behind, or the rate for a smaller tree).

Allowance for rainfall

Rain may only supplement trickle irrigation for several days. The tree largely relies on the moisture in the dripper wetting zones and the dense root system in these areas quickly extracts most available moisture. The following table gives figures which can be used as a guide for withholding irrigation after rain.

Number of days without irrigation following rain
    Rainfall
Before December
After December
    10-20 mm
3
1
    20-30 mm
6
3
    30-40 mm
8
4
    40-50 mm
10
5
    50 mm
10
5
In many soils, the ground outside the wetting pattern will crack by mid-season in a dry year and water will drain rapidly out of the root zone. The figures shown in the table err on the light side. This is necessary for many orchards, especially in the Goulburn Valley, which have surface soils that drain slowly. It is possible to double the rates shown in Table 1 and obtain faster growth where trees are planted in sandy soil with no restricting clay layers, or in friable soil on a good slope.

Water needs in following years

Peach trees grow rapidly until they start to produce heavily and the irrigation procedure outlined before is still valid for at least the first three seasons in the orchard if the planting distance between trees is at least 5 m along the tree line. Table 2 predicts watering rates in the second and third season. Measure the butt circumferences of a few average trees in winter and calculate the irrigation schedule before the start of the season . This Agriculture Note applies specifically to peach trees but the same principles apply to trickle irrigation of other crops.

Table 1. Water needed for vigorous peach trees in the season following planting expressed to the nearest litre. To use the table, estimate the average tree size at planting and use the appropriate column.
Each column allows for the anticipated increase in tree size from month to month with a second butt circumference measurement taken in mid January to correct for any deviation from the assumed growth rate.

    Month
Climate
Butt circumference at planting


30 mm 50 mm 60 mm 75 mm


Weekly water requirements in litres
    November
Cool (25 mm evap) 5 9 18 23

Warm (37 mm evap) 7 14 27 34

Hot (50 mm evap) 9 18 36 45
    December
Cool 7 14 27 34

Warm11 20 41 50

Hot14 27 54 68
    Early January
Cool11 20 41 50

Warm 16 31 59 74

Hot23 40 81 99


Butt circumference in January


75 mm 90 mm115 mm125 mm


Weekly water requirements in litres
    Late January
Cool18 31 54 68

Warm27 47 81101

Hot36 63108135
    Early February
Cool27 41 72 77

Warm41 61108115

Hot54 81144153
    Late February
Cool34 47 81 90

Warm50 72112135

Hot68 95162180
    March
Cool41 54 90 99

Warm61 81135149

Hot81108180198

Table 2. Weekly irrigation requirement in the second and third season

    Month
Climate
Average butt circumference at planting


100-110 mm
130-140 mm
150-170 mm
180-200 mm


Weekly water requirements in litres
    November
Cool (25 mm evap)
32
82
77
132

Warm (37 mm evap)
50
123
118
200

Hot (50 mm evap)
68
164
155
264
    December
Cool
41
90
109
164

Warm
64
135
164
246

Hot
82
180
218
328
    January
Cool
50
114
132
191

Warm
77
173
200
287

Hot
100
228
264
382
    February
Cool
77
132
187
223

Warm
118
200
282
337

Hot
155
264
373
446
    March
Cool
109
164
246
287

Warm
164
246
369
432

Hot
218
328
491
578

The advice provided in this publication is intended as a source of information only. Always read the label before using any of the products mentioned. The State of Victoria and its employees do not guarantee that the publication is without flaw of any kind or is wholly appropriate for your particular purposes and therefore disclaims all liability for any error, loss or other consequence which may arise from you relying on any information in this publication.


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