Week 5&6 Day 1-5

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LESSON 3

Interpreting Plans and Drawings

LEARNING OUTCOMES:
At the end of this Lesson you are expected to
do the following:

LO 1. Interpret farm plans and lay-outs; and


LO 2. Interpret irrigation plan and design.
Week 6: Day 1-5
Definition of Terms
Lay-outing-locating the position of plant in the field
Intercropping-the planting of other crop within the row of the main crop
Monocropping- the growing of single crop
Irrigation- the application of water to the soil by any other means than rainfall
Pretest
Let us determine how much you already know about interpreting plans and
layouts. Take this test.

Legend:
o Plant

MAKE YOUR INTERPRETATION:


1. What is your area?
2. How many rows are there in the area?
3. How many plants are there in a row?
4. How many plants are there in the area?
5. What is the distance between plants per row?
6. What is the distance of plants between hill?
7. How many plants are there in row A?
8. What is the length of the area?
9. What is the width of the area?
10. How many plants are needed in rows A,B and C?
INTERPRET FARM PLANS AND LAYOUTS
The ‗Farming for the Future‘ (FFTF) program can help you to plan the best farm layout. It is an
initiative of NSW Government agencies focusing on whole farm planning. A whole farm plan
considers the farm‘s physical, financial and human/personal resources for both now and the
future.

Site assessment
An on-site assessment of a farm is necessary so that a map can be drawn of the property‘s
topography, boundaries, soils, water resources and so on, and a farm business plan can be
formulated.

Government plans
Acquaint yourself with relevant Regional Environmental Plans (REPs), Local Environmental Plans
(LEPs), and Development Control Plans (DCPs) and their short and long-term effects on your
proposed or existing farm enterprise. This will help reduce unforeseen risks and enhance your
farm business. Council‘s building approval or development consent (DAs) may be needed for
siting greenhouses, siting and constructing dams or erecting hail and windbreak netting. Council
approval to clear land or a ‗no burning of crop debris or waste
materials on farm‘ may apply. Consent will be required if odor or noise is a nuisance likely to be
generated from the development.

How Crops are Arranged in Row Planting


Row planting as applied in conventional horizontal farming or gardening is a system of growing
crops in linear pattern in at least one direction rather than planting without any distinct
arrangement. It is practiced in most crops whether direct seeded, transplanted or grown from
vegetative planting materials, both in monocropping and multiple cropping.
Crops are planted in rows or straight lines, either singly or in multiple rows, mainly to enhance
maximum yields as well as for convenience. An east-west row orientation is preferred to maximize
light absorption, but this is not always possible.
In many cases the topography that includes the shape, terrain and slope of the land, as well
as the location of existing vegetation, roads, irrigation lines, buildings and physical barriers, dictate
the row orientation.
The specific advantages of row planting over broadcasting or scatter planting include the following:
(1) light absorption is maximized and, conversely, the excessive shading effect of other plants is
minimized thus favoring more efficient photosynthesis and improved crop yield; (2) wind passage
along the interrow is enhanced which increases gas exchanges and prevents excessive humidity;
(3) access through the interrow facilitates cultivation, weeding, and other farm operations including
hauling; (4) movement within the crop area is convenient and allows close inspection of individual
plants; and (5) visibility is enhanced.

Row Planting Arrangement


Row-planted crops are either arranged in equidistant single rows or in multiple rows. Planting in
single rows is most common in monocropping or sole cropping, the growing of a single crop.
Different systems of planting arrangement within the row are practiced in both single and multiple
row planting, depending on the characteristics and requirement of the crop, particularly its extent
of canopy expansion. In the hill method of planting crops by direct seeding, the crops are
arranged, singly or in group, in uniform distances. But in the drill method, the only consideration is
a uniform number of plants per linear meter.
In row-planted fruit trees and other perennial crops like coconut, oil palm and rubber, the common
types of planting or spatial arrangement are the square, rectangular, quincunx, and triangular or
hexagonal.

Multiple Row Planting Arrangement


Multiple row planting is a system of growing crops in blocks or strips of 2 or more rows. The
adjacent blocks are separated by a space which may remain vacant or planted to other crops. This
planting arrangement is common in multiple cropping in which two or more crops are grown in
the same piece of land. It is also employed in monocropping where an alley wide enough to
facilitate passage is needed.
Coconut and other perennial crops are often intercropped with multiple rows of annual
crops like corn and pineapple. This is a common practice of maximizing the use of vacant interrow
spaces when the maincrop has not fully developed thus allowing sufficient light exposure. In some
farms, the intercrop consists of multiple rows of such crops as coffee, cacao and banana. In this
system, both single row planting (for the maincrop) and multiple row planting (for the intercrop) are
combined.
In vegetable production that employs close spacing and where crops should be within easy reach,
the common practice is to plant in plots having multiple rows. A space between plots is provided to
allow passage.

Spatial Arrangement in Intercropping


Spatial arrangement is the systematic apportioning of the farm area or any growing
surface for crop production. In multiple cropping by intercropping, the intercrop can be planted in
any of the following ways: (1) within the rows of the maincrop, (2) between the rows of the
maincrop, and (3) in replacement series Planting of the intercrop between two adjacent hills within
the same row of the main crop allows interrow cultivation but the intercrop has limited exposure to
sunlight. This is exemplified by the planting of peanut or mungbean between corn plants within the
same row or two coffee plants that are 3 m apart between coconut plants. Single row planting of
the intercrop can also be done between the rows of the maincrop. For example, peanut or
mungbean can be dibbled between two adjacent rows of corn. This system of planting
arrangement is likewise common in coconut farms where fruit trees like durian, lanzones and
mangosteen are grown in single rows between coconut.
In replacement series, one or more rows that are intended for the maincrop are replaced
with the intercrop. For example, a 3:2 corn+mungbean intercrop means that for every 4 rows that
are intended for sole corn, only 3 rows are planted to corn and one row may be substituted with 2
rows of mungbean. Another practice is in strip intercropping, for example the simultaneous
growing of 6 rows corn and 12 rows soybean in alternating strips. These particular examples result
to multiple row planting arrangement.

Methods of Planting Crops in the Farm


In general, there are two methods of planting crops: direct seeding and transplanting. Direct
seeding is either by broadcast, hill or dibble, or by drill method. The hill and the drill methods are
alternative options in row planting.
Direct seeding or direct sowing is a method of planting in which seeds are directly planted
on the ground in the farm or any growing surface while transplanting makes use of pre-grown
plants, seedlings or vegetatively propagated clones. The term transplanting is also used to refer to
the practice of replanting an already established plant in one location and moving it elsewhere.
Direct seeding generally applies to large-seeded vegetables as well as in cereals and grain
legumes. Transplanting is most common with small-seeded vegetables, vegetatively propagated
crops, ornamental crops, fruit trees and many perennial crops. The term direct seeding is also
commonly used to refer to the planting of seedpieces or underground vegetative planting materials
directly into the soil.
Planting crops by broadcasting or sabog tanim, or scatter planting, commonly applies to
small seeds, like rice and mungbean, that are capable of germination and sustained growth
without soil cover. There is no control of plant-to-plant spacing. The seeds are simply distributed
on a well prepared ground by hand or with a mechanical broadcaster. With hand broadcasting, a
volume of seeds is held by the hand and thrown with a wide swath. Skill is important to ensure
even distribution of seeds per unit ground area based on the desired seeding rate per hectare. For
example, a seeding rate of 100 kg per hectare means that the seeds have to be distributed at an
average of 0.01 kg or 10 g per sq meter. Assuming that the crop is rice with a weight of 1000
grains of 29 grams, this is equivalent to a seeding rate of about 345 seeds per sq meter.
Excessive seeding per unit area will mean that the prepared seeds will have been
completely sown but a portion of the farm is still unplanted, and so additional seeds need to be
procured. Conversely, seeding below the average will complete the planting of the entire farm with
some seeds still left. In lowland rice, the seeds are broadcasted on puddled soil or over water and
allowed to germinate without covering. The broadcast method of planting crops is also common
with mungbean and cowpea grown as green manure. But in upland farming, it is best to pass a
tooth harrow or rake after broadcasting to cover the seeds. The soil covering will hide the seeds
from seed-harvesting organisms like chicken and birds. It will also ensure that the seeds have full
contact with the soil which will maximize germination and improve the chance of the seedlings to
fully develop. In pasture establishment, a large herd of livestock can be released after
broadcasting to press the seeds into the ground by their hooves.
Dibbling is an old method of planting crops practiced by subsistence farmers in hilly lands.
My late cousin used to do this on a portion of the farm in Akle, San Ildefonso, Bulacan. That part of
the farm, now grown to coconut that is regularly harvested for copra, has a very steep slope with
shrubs, stumps of trees, and large limestone. Plowing by carabao was impossible so that the only
way to prepare the land was by slash-and-burn or kaingin system.
Slashing and burning are done during summer when the grasses are dry, and corn is
planted at the start of the rainy season. With a dibbler or ―panghasok‖ (a pointed, spear-like
stem) held by one hand, he strikes the ground to make holes about 2 inches ( 5 cm) deep and 1-2
steps apart. As the pointed tip of the dibbler is lifted, someone else immediately drops 3-4 seeds
of an indigenous, open-pollinated corn into the hole. The hole is not refilled with soil, that part is
done naturally by the cascading downward movement of surface soil and fragments of rock.
Between harvesting and burning, the area is fallowed.
In both the hill and drill methods of planting crops by direct seeding, there is a desired row-
to-row spacing. Hills with a single or multiple number of plants are spaced uniformly within each
row so that in the hill method there is always a reference to hill distance and number of plants per
hill. A hill is that specific spot on the ground on which a plant or a group of plants is grown. In
contrast, there is no uniform spacing between plants in the row in the drill method, but uniformity in
number of plants per linear meter is intended. The hill method of direct seeding is done by
dropping seeds in holes made by a dibbler or in furrows that are more or less equidistant. But with
mechanized farming, a combine furrower-planter is commonly used.
In planting corn under rainfed conditions at a population density of, for instance, 60,000
plants per hectare at 1 plant per hill in rows 70 cm apart, the farmer walks forward along a furrow
and drops a seed every 23.8 cm to the bottom of the furrow. He does not carry a measuring tool,
he just estimates distances on the ground with impressive accuracy borne of long experience. To
cover the seeds, he merely sweeps the ridge at either side of the furrow by one foot to push some
soil toward the seed and steps thereon to press the soil on top of the seed.
The drill method of planting crops is done, either manually or mechanically, by releasing
seeds continuously, as if pouring water from a bottle with a small opening. Manual drilling applies
to small seeds like rice, millet, and mungbean and is usually done by hand. It can also be
accomplished by placing small, roundish seeds in a bottle with a hole on the cover. The seeds are
simply released by tilting and slightly shaking the bottle so that the seeds drop one after the other
or in a cascade through the hole and toward the ground.
The seeds are drilled with or without furrows. In rice, drilling in puddled soil in linear
direction is a modification of seed broadcasting in which plants are dispersed without plantto- plant
spacing. But in rainfed sorghum, mungbean, and other grain legumes, the seeds are always drilled
at the bottom of the furrow, covered with soil by raking or by foot, and stepped on to press the soil.
Just like in the hill method of planting crops, an even distribution of drilled seeds is intended but
varies with the seeding rate per hectare and row distance. With a seeding rate of 100 kg per
hectare in rows 20 cm apart, the calculated average seeding rate per linear meter in the row is 2
grams. With 1000 grain weight of 29 grams for rice, this is equivalent to a seeding rate of about 70
seeds per linear meter. But if the row distance is widened to 25 cm, the average seeding rate will
increase to 2.5 grams or 86-87 seeds per linear meter.
In contrast to direct seeding, transplanting is a method of planting crops in which potted
plants or pre-grown seedlings or clones are planted on the ground, other growing surface, or any
growing structure. Transplanting is also convenient with a few plants that can be transferred with a
ball of soil around the roots. In some vegetables, it is common to prick seedlings from the seedbed
and transplant them bareroot to the garden plot. In perennial species like coffee at a time when
rainfall has become frequent and light is not intense, uprooted wildlings or bareroot transplants
have been directly planted.

Evaluation: Write your answer on your activity notebook.


Fill-in the blanks
1. An east-west row orientation is preferred to _____________.
2. ______________is the systematic apportioning of the farm area or any growing surface
for crop production.
3. Single row planting of the intercrop can also be done between the rows of the________.
4. Slashing and burning are done during _____________when the grasses are dry, and
corn is planted at the start of the rainy season.
5. The ______________method of planting crops is also common with mungbean and
cowpea grown as green manure.
6-8.The intercrop can be planted in any of the following ways: (6)________________,
(7)___________________, and (8) ____________________.
9-10. In general, there are two methods of planting crops: (9)________________and.
(10)________________.
Show that you learned something by doing this activity
Activity Sheet 1.1
MATERIALS NEEDED:
Quantity Description
2 sheets Bond paper short
1 pc Pencil
1 pc Ruler
INSTRUCTIONS:
1. Put 1 inch border lines on your bond paper
2. Use the following data in making your layout
Imagine that 1 cm on your drawing is equivalent to 1m
A. Width= 16 m
B. Length=19 m
C. Planting distance
Between row=1m
Between hill=.5 m
3. Sketch inside the border lines your plot layout
4. Submit your output to your teacher
EVALUATION:
Your work will be evaluated by your teacher using the following criteria:
1. Accuracy 70%
2. Presentation 20%
3. Neatness 10 %

Week 6: Day 1-5


Let us determine how much you already know about interpreting irrigation plan
and design. Take this test.
Pretest LO 2
Enumerate the following:
(2) FUNCTIONS OF FARM IRRIGATION SYSTEMS
1. ______________________________________
2. ______________________________________
(3) ESSENTIAL FEATURES OF A PLAN
1. _______________________________________
2. _______________________________________
3. _______________________________________
(2) Types of Conventional Sprinkler Systems
1. ______________________________________
2. ______________________________________
(3) Advantages of drip or trickle irrigation
1. _______________________________________
2. _______________________________________
3. _______________________________________

IRRIGATION SYSTEM PLAN AND DESIGN


Water required by crops is supplied by nature in the form of precipitation, but when it
becomes scarce or its distribution does not coincide with demand peaks, it is then necessary to
supply it artificially, by irrigation. Several irrigation methods are available, and the selection of one
depends on factors such as water availability, crop, soil characteristics, land topography, and
associated cost.
Proper design of an irrigation system requires that the pumping system precisely match to the
irrigation distribution system so that the pressure and flow rate required can be efficiently provided
by the pumping system. The energy required to pump water is determined by the total dynamic
head (water lift, pipe friction, system pressure, etc.), the water flow rate desired and the pumping
system's efficiency.
Irrigation water management involves determining when to irrigate, the amount of water to
apply at each irrigation event and during each stage of plant, and operating and maintaining the
irrigation system. The main management objective is to manage the production system for profit
without compromising environment and in agreement with water availability. A major management
activity involves irrigation scheduling or determining when and how much water to apply,
considering the irrigation method and other field characteristics.

FUNCTIONS OF FARM IRRIGATION SYSTEMS


The primary function of farm irrigation systems is to supply crops with irrigation water in the
quantities and at the time it is needed. Specific function includes:
1. Diverting water from the water source.
2. Conveying it to individual fields within the farm.
3. Distributing it within each field.
4. Providing a means for measuring and regulating flows.
Other functions of farm irrigation system include crop and soil cooling, protecting crops from frost
damage, delaying fruit and bud development, and controlling wind erosion, providing water for
seed germination, application of chemicals, and land application of wastes.

REASONS FOR AN IRRIGATION PLAN


• A project plan enables the designer to lay out the irrigation system in the most cost effective way.
The plan is used to generate a material list and to evaluate the anticipated project costs.
• The plan provides step by step information on system installation. Information on crop spacing,
sprinklers, pumping requirements, pipeline sizes and lengths should be included on the plan.
Pertinent obstructions such as roads, trees, gas, oil, water, telephone or transmission lines must
also be indicated.
• Specification, design standards and work schedules as set out on a plan form the basis of any
contractual agreements between the installation contractor and the farmer.
• The plan provides a record for future reference. It can be used for overall farm planning and
identifies limits of expansion potential.

ESSENTIAL FEATURES OF A PLAN


• Topographic Data - the field shape must be accurately drawn showing pertinent obstructions,
features and elevation details.
• Water Source Capacity - the water supply must be clearly indicated showing location and
available capacity.
• Depending on the water source, a well log or water license must accompany the irrigation
plan. Irrigation reservoirs also require Water Management Branch licensing.
• Soil and Crop Characteristics - soil and crop limitations must be accounted for to reduce runoff
and deep percolation by mismanagement of the irrigation system.
• Design Parameters - soil water holding capacity, maximum application rate and climatic data
must be used to select the correct irrigation system design.
• Design Data - the nozzle selected, operating pressure, discharge rate and sprinkler spacing
must all be shown on the plan. The irrigation interval, set time, application rate and net amount
applied must also be calculated.

Directions: Enumerate what is asked in the following statements.


(4) functions of farm irrigation systems
1. _____________________________________
2. _____________________________________
3. _____________________________________
4. _____________________________________
(6) essential features of a plan
1. ______________________________________
2. ______________________________________
3. ______________________________________
4 ______________________________________
5. ______________________________________
6. ______________________________________

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