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  2. Watering trough - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watering_trough

    An abreuvoir is a watering trough, fountain, or other installed basin: originally intended to provide humans and/or animals at a rural or urban watering place with fresh drinking water. They were often located at springs. In pre–automobile era cities, they were built as equestrian water troughs for horses providing transportation.

  3. Subirrigation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subirrigation

    Subirrigation also known as seepage irrigation, is a method of irrigation where water is delivered to the plant root zone. The excess may be collected for reuse. Subirrigation is used in growing field crops such as tomatoes, peppers, and sugar cane in areas with high water tables such as Florida and in commercial greenhouse operations.

  4. Bills horse troughs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bills_horse_troughs

    The majority of the troughs were installed in Victoria and New South Wales between 1930 and 1939. [1] Initially the troughs were individually designed and constructed, however by the early 1930s, J. B. Phillips, a relative of the Bills, became the head contractor. Working to a standard design he produced the troughs in Auburn Road in Hawthorn. [4]

  5. Rainwater tank - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rainwater_tank

    However, many homes use small scale rain barrels to harvest minute quantities of water for landscaping/gardening applications rather than as a potable water surrogate. These small rain barrels, often recycled from food storage and transport barrels or, in some cases, whiskey and wine aging barrels , are often inexpensive.

  6. Irrigation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irrigation

    Water is delivered from below, absorbed by upwards, and the excess collected for recycling. Typically, a solution of water and nutrients floods a container or flows through a trough for a short period of time, 10–20 minutes, and is then pumped back into a holding tank for reuse. Sub-irrigation in greenhouses requires fairly sophisticated ...

  7. Bella Vista (homestead) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bella_Vista_(homestead)

    A c. 1920 photograph shows the pump used to get water from the underground cisterns/tanks. [1] The kitchen garden is located to the west of the main house and still contains mature fruit trees, including a fruiting fig (Ficus carica) and some of the few surviving citrus trees on Bella Vista farm.

  8. Water garden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Water_garden

    Water garden or aquatic garden, is a term sometimes used for gardens, or parts of gardens, where any type of water feature (particularly garden ponds) is a principal or dominant element. The primary focus is on plants, but they will sometimes also house waterfowl , or ornamental fish , in which case it may be called a fish pond .

  9. Hydroponics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydroponics

    Top-fed deep water culture is a technique involving delivering highly oxygenated nutrient solution direct to the root zone of plants. While deep water culture involves the plant roots hanging down into a reservoir of nutrient solution, in top-fed deep water culture the solution is pumped from the reservoir up to the roots (top feeding).

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