Water

Watering Your Yard Effectively

We are getting ready for another summer trying to have a lush lawn and garden while keeping our water bills manageable!

Learn how to water effectively.

Often, people water too much, too often, at the wrong times, and the wrong way. Not only does this waste a valuable and increasingly scarce resource, it also makes your lawn look worse by increasing disease, insect, and thatch problems.

If you water every other day, the grass thinks, “I will drink again tomorrow. Why bother to make long, thick roots and work hard?” On the other hand, if you water less frequently but apply more, the grass will produce a deeper, healthy root system, and your water bill will decrease. So, everyone wins.

Reni Brown, former Smith County Master Gardener
Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service

How Long Should I Run My Sprinkler?

On average, your yard needs 1 ½ inches of water each week.  To determine how long to run your sprinkler:

Run your sprinkler and see how long it takes to get a half inch of water in the can – just like a rain gauge. Usually it’s about 30 minutes. So, 20 minutes, 3 times per week will get an inch of water on your lawn, and 30 minutes 3 times per week will get 1 ½” on your lawn.

Along with mowing the grass too short, watering at night is actually determinantal to your lawn.  Homeowners who can’t water in the mornings before work should do it on a weekend morning. The best time is early in the morning: 4 a.m. to 10 a.m.

http://www.greengrassok.com/greengrass-services/how-to-water-your-lawn

Waste Not

Take time to observe your irrigation system. Note where water delivery is coating hard surfaces, like walks or driveways, or where puddling is occurring on the lawn. Adjust nozzles and irrigation duration as needed to ensure you’re making the most efficient use of every drop of water.

Seasonal Settings

Reset your irrigation timer monthly. This is one of the most overlooked aspects of a lawn irrigation system. Don’t let your system run on summer settings once your region’s rainy season arrives.

https://www.diynetwork.com/how-to/outdoors/landscaping/tips-for-watering-your-lawn-the-right-way-pictures

And Conserve Water!

Cost isn’t the only concern. Dr. Gene Taylor from Texas A&M communicates some thought-provoking statistics on water.

  • By the year 2035, Texas will have available only about 85 percent of the water it will require.
  • About 35 percent of the water we now use in the summer goes to landscape.
  • The population of Texas is projected to double in the next 50 years.

All of the above reinforce our need to conserve water. And there are more short-term benefits to being frugal with water, too.

  • Lower water bills.
  • Decreased incidence of turf disease.
  • Deeper roots, which help turf better withstand drought stress.
  • Overall better turf quality; more problems are caused by over-watering than under-watering.

Over-watering is a frequent problem that can easily be remedied to the benefit of your lawn and checkbook. Here are some water conservation tips.

  • Check your sprinkler system frequently for damaged heads, or heads that are watering the street, sidewalk, etc.
  • Evaluate performance by knowing how long it takes your system to provide one inch of water to the grass.
  • Irrigate based on the weather rather than by automatic timer. Don’t water if it has rained enough to give the grass one inch of water in the last week.

Cynthia Branch Mills, former Smith County Master Gardener
Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Service

https://www.southernliving.com/garden/grumpy-gardener/dont-be-a-lawn-watering-dummy

Watering Your Yard Effectively2018-04-05T13:07:56-05:00

Understanding North Harris County Regional Water Authority

The North Harris County Regional Water Authority (NHCRWA) was created by the Texas State Legislature in 1999. The NHCRWA is operated by an elected Board of Directors. The primary assignment is to develop and implement a strategy for complying with the Harris-Galveston Subsidence District’s Regulatory Plan that requires a reduction in groundwater used to be more than 20% of total water demand by the year 2035. Since the NHCRWA is not a taxing entity, funding for future water supplies and the infrastructure to deliver it is accomplished through the sale of revenue bonds. These revenue bonds are paid for by monies generated from groundwater pumpage fees and water sales.

How does this affect me you ask?

NHCRWA bills the Northampton Municipal Utility District $2.40 for every 1,000 gallons of water it pumps. This fee is passed through to you based on your actual water usage plus 20% to recover district usage and maintenance events such as flushing our system. To provide some relief, the Board of Directors has compared payments made to the NHCRWA with payments received from the District’s residents, and determined that with additional conservation efforts, this amount can be reduced to 15%. Effective April 1, 2017 the NHCRWA is implementing a rate increase from $2.40 to $2.90. By reducing the percentage, residents will see an increase to $3.34 rather than $3.48 per 1,000 gallons of water used.

For more information regarding the North Harris County Regional Water Authority, please visit their website at www.nhcrwa.org.

Understanding North Harris County Regional Water Authority2017-05-02T10:28:23-05:00

MUDs Are Good For Texas

MUDs have been one of the unknown success stories in Texas. Yet, there is little understanding of what they are and how they are good for Texas. MUDS foster and manage quality affordable growth and are essential to maintaining our vibrant Texas economy.

Throughout recent years, Texas, and particularly the Greater Houston area, have experienced continued economic and population growth that is unrivaled across the nation. With our favorable economic environment, Houston is sure to continue to enjoy increased population growth and the need for additional housing. MUDs are essential for providing quality infrastructure and affordably priced housing to support such growth.

MUDs are a form of limited local governments created by the State that provide water, sewer, drainage, road, and park infrastructure to new communities. MUDs support well-planned, highquality development and affordably priced housing in neighborhoods with a wide range of amenities. The Woodlands, Cinco Ranch, Shadow Creek Ranch, Sienna Plantation, and Towne Lake, as examples, are recognized as some of the finest master-planned communities in the United States. Each of these communities, like many others across the state, is served by MUDs. Houston’s growth, like other cities in the region, has been fueled by MUDs. Over time, hundreds of MUDs have been dissolved and annexed into Houston and other cities. Kingwood, Clear Lake, and First Colony were all developed by MUDs. And Houston is not alone; the growth of Sugar Land, Katy, Pearland, Missouri City, League City, Conroe, and a dozen more cities has all been through MUDs.

MUDs provide the best mechanism to finance and maintain high-quality infrastructure associated with real estate development. Many cities and counties are unwilling or unable to extend basic infrastructure for new development because the existing taxpayers do not want to pay for infrastructure for new development. MUDs efficiently and equitably fill this void by allowing the residents and businesses who use the facilities to pay for them; existing communities do not pay for or subsidize new developments. In MUDs, “growth pays for itself.”

MUD financing results in lower home prices for consumers by allowing the cost of infrastructure to be paid over time rather than building the infrastructure costs into the initial home price. All of this occurs under the purview of a locally elected board of directors that is subject to city and/or county and state agency oversight and regulation. MUDs operate with a reimbursement model that requires developers to pay all costs relating to the design and construction of infrastructure and bear the financial risk involved. Developers are repaid for infrastructure costs by the issuance of bonds, only when sufficient development has occurred to justify and support reimbursement at a reasonable tax rate. This structure ensures that MUD tax rates decline over time and that developers can offer homes at prices that are the envy of consumers nationwide.

MUDs embody transparent local government. Before a person buys a home within a MUD, a person receives at least two notices, once with the earnest money contract and again at closing, that the home is located within a MUD. This notice contains information about the MUD’s tax rate, or anticipated tax rate, voted bond authorization, and bonds that have been issued. Transparency measures such as this, when combined with the MUD regulatory regime, Texas open meetings, public information, and financial reporting laws make for highly accountable and effective neighborhood government. MUDs are “grass roots” local governments where the directors, who set the tax rates and water and sewer rates, are elected by the residents in the neighborhood. Measuring the success of MUDs is as simple as looking at the millions of Texans who consciously choose to live in MUDs.

We are fortunate to live in Texas and a region that is thriving economically, creating new jobs, and developing new neighborhoods and communities. Our success will lead to additional population growth and a continued need for high-quality housing at an affordable price. The continued use of MUDs to foster and manage quality development will be critical to provide for the needs of future growth in the greater Houston region.

MUDs Are Good For Texas2017-01-15T10:38:02-06:00
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