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1.
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Place
your plants in groups according to the amount of water they need.
This way, you won't over- or under-water parts of your lawn or garden.
Sloping garden? Place drought tolerant plants at higher elevations,
and thirsty ones at lower elevations. The water from the higher
areas will trickle down to the water-demanding plants.

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2.
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If
at all possible, try to water in the early morning, before 9am. Mid
to late afternoon watering loses much to evaporation, and evening
watering encourages diseases like mildew. You'd be sick too, if you
went to bed wearing wet pyjamas.
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3.
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Water
slowly and deeply. Wear a Walkman, or practice meditation and/or deep
breathing as you water. Use the opportunity to slow down and get up
close and personal with your plant material. What a delight, for example,
to be surprised by the first indescribably RED flowers of Lobelia
cardinalis
If you like to water by hand, watering wands are effective,
and put the water more or less where you want it to go.
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| 4. |

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Invest
in a new good-quality sprinkler, and recycle that old leaky hose.
Leaks waste water.
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| 5. |
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Avoid placing
watering devices where they waste water on a driveway, deck or porch.
Use a drip watering system. This can save up to 60% of the water
used by sprinkler systems.

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| 6. |
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Mulching
holds in moisture, and reduces evaporation. Keep up with regular mulching,
pruning, composting, and taking care of your plants. Strong plants
require less water than weak ones Use grass from the mower, shredded
pea vines, hay, or whatever suitable, disease-free material you have
handy. Even newspaper makes good mulch.
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| 7. |
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Avoid
babying your plants (except newly-planted ones). Like people, plants
need to work out to develop strength. It's fine to pamper the newly
planted, though, as they need time to establish strong roots. (Babies
don't need to lift weights!)
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| 8. |
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Keep the garden
as reasonably weed-free as you can manage; weeds compete for water.
Move container plants to shady areas during particularly hot and
sunny spells. This will not only reduce water loss due to evaporation
and watering, but keep your plants from 'blowing out' in the heat
- blooming too quickly and rapidly fading

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| 9. |
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If
you have a lawn and you can stand it, practice 'letting go' - let
your lawn go dormant. According to some experts, we may not be lucky
enough to have a choice one of these days.
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| 10. |
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Choose
an alternative to lawn such as wild flowers or tough ground cover.
Most lawn grass will re-appear and green up quickly come rainy season.
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