That actually is true. During the day, the sunlight causes the water to evaporate more rapidly. So at night, the water has more time to be absorbed into the soil before evaporating.
you can use irrigation
yes it does hahahahaha
no a gallon of gas is a gallon of gas if day or night
Always check the forecast for rainy weather to prevent unnecessary watering or over-watering. Setting up a compost pile can save you a bunch on fertilizer.
How Professional Lawn Care Can Save You Money (Apex)
To some degree, the conservation efforts depend upon the specific society you are asking about. In desert regions, you may find local ordinances against watering lawns or planting water-intensive landscaping plants - this is in place in Las Vegas, Nevada currently. Other places work to recycle "gray water" - water that is clean but is not treated to the standards of drinking water; it is often used as toilet water or watering the landscape. As an individual, you can make choices such as limiting or eliminating watering of your lawn, reducing water consumption in your home such as with water-conserving appliances and by being aware of how your actions impact water useage.
the planting substrute you used may be too dry to absorb water. take the pot and place it in a big bowl of water with the water about a cm below the edge of the potted plant. keep it over night and see if it helps. if it does remove it from the water and start watering normaly.
One way of conserving water is to protect watersheds.By rain water harvesting ,To conserve water one can take shorter showers, not leave the water on while brushing one's teeth, and also not watering one's lawn on a daily basis.
Keep watering it and take good care of it.
let's say the lawn is 80 feet by 100 feet; this would be 8,000 square feet. Multiply this by 144 = 1,152,000 square inches, then divide this number by 277.41 the number of cubic inches in an imperial gallon, and we get 4152.69 imperial gallons (18878.54 liters) every week or 66,443.04 imperial gallons (302,050.06 liters) of water used for the year. If we say this city has 50,000 homes, with that size of lawn, that is 3,322,152,000 imperial gallons of water (15,115,791,600 liters) consumed for watering lawns. We keep hearing we should switch to low flow toilets as they save approx 2 gallons of water per flush, so the water we have is saved. It is a vital resource. Well the old style waste your water toilets used 7 gallons per flush, and the water that is going to be used on lawns would flush the toilet 474,593,143 times (26 times a day per household). I know that this is a lot of numbers, but I thought it was worth making people aware of just how much water is being wasted on the lawn watering. There has been a lot of concern over water being used for agricultural purposes and how it effects fresh water reserves. The point I am trying to make is that the water used by agriculture is for food production and not for appearance. Food crops are produced on between 4.5 and 8 inches of watering, not the 16 inches estimated for lawn upkeep.
we can use all out,good night,net and clean stagnant water.
I would suspect that the chlorine is not helping the plants. Save the water a few days in the sun in translucent bottle,(like gallon milk jugs) to break down the chlorine and you have more neutral water. Maybe a spoonful of vinegar would help neutralize the chlorine. I use vinegar to neutralize Clorox in my washing machine water before watering the lawn with it. Time and sunlight are effective though.