For a long time, watering according to the calendar meant bring order to water management.
Pre-established shifts, recurring intervals, quantities defined on the basis of experience and custom have allowed agricultural companies, technicians and Consortia to organize work in a practical way, especially in more regular and predictable climatic contexts.
Today, however, this approach is showing increasingly evident limitations.
The calendar It can tell you when irrigation is due, but it can't tell you whether the crop actually needs it at that moment. It doesn't measure temperature, doesn't consider wind, doesn't interpret soil moisture, doesn't read the plant's vegetative state, and doesn't account for differences within the same plot.
In a context in which water availability is under increasing pressure And extreme weather events make the seasons less linear, watering according to the calendar is no longer enough. We need to move from a management based on recurrence to management based on the real needs of the crop.
Why calendar irrigation has worked for years
Calendar irrigation does not arise from an error, but from a concrete need.
For many agricultural companies it has been, and in part continues to be, a simple way to organize irrigation activities, plan the work, coordinate the interventions and respect any water distribution shifts.
In relatively stable climates, this system could offer an acceptable level of efficiency. If the seasons repeated themselves with a certain regularity, if rainfall was more predictable, and if temperatures remained within less extreme ranges, the experience accumulated over the years often allowed us to construct irrigation schemes that were quite consistent with the needs of the crops.
The problem is that today the context has changed.
Agricultural seasons are increasingly exposed to sudden oscillations, with prolonged periods of drought alternating with intense and concentrated rainfall. high temperatures They increase the evaporative demand of the atmosphere and alter the rate at which crops consume water. At the same time, the availability of the resource can no longer be considered a stable fact.
In this scenario, an irrigation shift decided only on the basis of the calendar it risks arriving too early, too late or with volumes inadequate for the real conditions of the field.
Water needs do not follow fixed dates
The water requirement of a crop is never the same.
It changes day by day depending on many variables: air temperature, humidity, wind, solar radiation, recent rainfall, soil characteristics, root depth, phenological stage and vegetative state of the plant.
Two apparently similar weeks on the calendar can therefore be very different from an agronomic point of viewA period of intense heat, for example, can rapidly increase evapotranspiration and make irrigation insufficient, even if it would have been adequate in milder conditions. Conversely, well-distributed rainfall or soil with good water retention capacity can temporarily reduce the need for irrigation.
For this reason the point is not only to know how often to water, but understand how much water is actually available for the crop and how much is consumed over time.
L'efficient irrigation It is born precisely from this reading: not from the repetition of a practice, but from thecontinuous observation of the relationship between plants, soil and atmosphere.
Evapotranspiration, the variable that the calendar doesn't see
One of the central elements in irrigation management is theevapotranspiration.
This term refers to the total amount of water that returns to the atmosphere through two processes: evaporation from the soil and plant transpiration. It is a fundamental quantity because it directly describes how much water is actually lost from the soil-crop system.
When temperatures are rising, the air is drier, the wind is stronger or the solar radiation is high, evapotranspiration increases. Consequently, also the crop's water requirement can increase significantly.
The calendar alone is not able to interpret this dynamic.
An irrigation schedule set every seven or ten days doesn't take into account that, during a particularly hot and windy week, the crop may require much more water than during a cooler and wetter week. Likewise, it doesn't take into account that different stages of plant development have different needs.
This is where traditional management shows its main limitation: treats time as a fixed variable, while water demand is a dynamic variable.
The double risk: watering too much or watering too late
When irrigation is not aligned with the actual needs of the crop, possible errors there are two.
The first is water too much.
In this case, water is applied when the plant doesn't yet need it, or more than necessary. The result isn't just a waste of water. Excess water can increase energy costs, promote nutrient loss through leaching, create stagnant conditions, and compromise the balance of the root system, especially in less draining soils.
The second mistake is watering too late.
In this case, the crop becomes stressed before the intervention is carried out. Depending on the species grown and the phenological stage, even relatively short periods of water shortage can affect growth, yield, product quality, and production uniformity.
In both cases, the problem is not just the amount of water used, but when it is used.
Irrigation efficiency does not depend on the simple containment of volumes, but on ability to distribute water when really needed and in the correct quantity.
Each plot responds differently
Another limitation of thecalendar irrigation is that it tends to consider the plot as a homogeneous unit.
In reality, however, even very different areas can coexist within the same fieldThey change soil texture, water-holding capacity, drainage, rooting depth, crop vigor, and stress response.
One part of the plot may be under conditions of greater water availability, while another may approach a critical threshold more quickly. A uniform intervention, decided only on the basis of the calendar, therefore risks being excessive in some areas and insufficient in others..
This internal variability It is one of the most important aspects of precision agriculture.
To observe it means to move beyond the idea of the field as an indistinct surface and begin to read it as a complex system, where irrigation decisions must take into account real differences between areas, crops and soil conditions.
From fixed shift to water balance
The necessary transition is from the fixed shift to the water balance.
The water balance It allows you to estimate how much water enters and exits the system. On the one hand, there are the contributions, such as rain and irrigation. On the other hand there are the losses, mainly linked to evaporation from the soil and plant transpiration.
Putting these elements together allows us to evaluate the water status of the crop much more precisely compared to a simple irrigation calendar.
The question, therefore, changes.
It is no longer just a question of asking "when should we irrigate?", but "How much water is actually available for the crop?”, “how much is he consuming?”, “How much will be needed in the next few days?" And "What intervention can help avoid stress without generating waste?”.
This change of perspective And decisive because it transforms irrigation from a recurring activity to a technical decision.
TETHYS Aqua, the DSS to decide when and how much to irrigate
TETHYS Aqua It was born precisely to support this paradigm shift.
Aqua is the TETHYS DSS dedicated to irrigation management and calculation of crop water requirementsThe system integrates satellite data, meteorological information, soil data, and environmental modeling to estimate the water status of plots and transform this information into operational irrigation advice.
The value of the system is not only in the collection of given, but in the ability to make it useful for making decisions.
By calculating the water balance and analyzing the vegetative state, Aqua helps to understand when to intervene, with what volumes and with what priority. In this way, irrigation is no longer managed only on the basis of pre-established shifts, but on the basis of actual crop and soil conditions.
A particularly relevant aspect is that the system operates without the need to install sensors, probes or control units in the field. This allows you to apply it also on large surfaces, at company, district or consortium level, reducing operational constraints and making large-scale adoption easier.
For agricultural companies, agronomists and Land Reclamation Consortia, Aqua therefore represents a tool for moving from irrigation management based on habit to management based on updated data, continuous observations and operational indications.
What's changing for agricultural companies and land reclamation consortia?
Precision irrigation isn't just about individual plots.
For a farm, Having up-to-date irrigation advice means reducing waste, containing energy costs, intervening more promptly and protecting the crop at the most delicate moments.
For an agronomist, means having an objective basis to support technical decisions and compare the evolution of the water and vegetative status of crops over time.
For a Land Reclamation ConsortiumHowever, the issue takes on an even broader dimension. Knowing actual irrigation needs and the distribution of irrigated areas allows for better resource planning, organizing supply across different districts, identifying local critical issues, and supporting more transparent and documentable water management.
In all these cases, the data does not replace field experience, makes it more solid.
Agronomic knowledge remains central, but is supported by tools capable of measuring what the calendar alone is no longer able to represent.
Irrigating better means measuring first
Irrigation according to a calendar has helped organize agricultural work for years.
Today, however, water management requires a higher level of precisionCrops consume water dynamically, soils respond differently, climatic conditions change rapidly and water resources are increasingly precious.
In this context, Irrigating better means using water only when needed, where needed and in the right quantity. It means anticipate water stress before it becomes visible. It means reduce waste without compromising production. It means transform data into an agronomic decision.
The calendar can still help organize work, but it can no longer be the only criterion for choosing.
To manage irrigation efficiently you need instruments capable of reading the field, interpreting the real need and providing operational indications.



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