Build a landscape that stays healthy in Hill Country heat—without wasting water
A sprinkler system should do three things well: deliver the right amount of water, at the right time, in the right places. In San Antonio and the surrounding Hill Country, that’s not “nice to have”—it’s the difference between a thriving lawn/planting bed and ongoing patching, runoff, and high water bills. This guide breaks down what matters most for sprinkler system installation, including smart zoning, drip vs. spray choices, backflow protection, and how to set schedules that align with local watering rules.
Why irrigation design matters more than the brand of sprinkler head
In South Texas, irrigation problems usually come from design mismatches—not “bad equipment.” If you’ve seen soggy spots near sidewalks, dry corners by the driveway, or plant beds that struggle while the lawn looks fine (or vice versa), the root cause is often one of these:
Spray, rotor, or drip? Match the method to the area
The best San Antonio irrigation systems typically use a combination of head types. Here’s a practical comparison homeowners and property managers can use when planning a new install or retrofit:
| Irrigation Type | Best For | Strengths | Watch-Outs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spray heads | Small lawn sections, narrow strips | Even coverage in tight areas | Higher runoff risk on slopes/clay; wind drift |
| Rotors | Larger turf areas | Lower application rate; good soaking | Needs correct spacing/pressure to avoid dry rings |
| Drip (inline or point) | Beds, shrubs, trees, xeriscape | Efficient; targets root zones; minimal evaporation | Needs filtration/pressure regulation; hidden leaks can go unnoticed |
A reliable install starts with zoning, pressure, and drainage
A high-performing sprinkler system installation is built around the property—not a one-size layout. Here are the details that make a system feel “set-it-and-forget-it” instead of a weekly headache:
1) Smart zoning by sun, slope, and plant type
Separate front/back, sunny/shady, turf/beds, and slope/flat areas. That lets you water deeply where needed and shorten cycles where runoff would happen.
2) Pressure regulation and matched precipitation
Consistent pressure improves uniformity. For turf, “matched precipitation rate” nozzles help prevent one area from getting drenched while another stays dry.
3) Head-to-head coverage (the uniformity rule)
Many irrigation layouts are designed so spray reaches the next head (“head-to-head”). This reduces brown edges and the temptation to overwater.
4) Check valves and smart placement to stop low-head drainage
On slopes, leftover line water can drain out of the lowest heads after the zone shuts off—creating puddles and erosion. Check valves and correct head selection prevent that.
Step-by-step: What to expect during sprinkler system installation
Step 1: Site walk + irrigation plan
A good plan accounts for turf type, beds, tree locations, slope, sun exposure, and where runoff would go. This is also the time to identify any low-pressure constraints.
Step 2: Zoning + head selection
Rotors for larger turf, sprays for small strips, and drip for beds/trees. Avoid mixing head types in the same zone whenever possible.
Step 3: Trenching + pipe/valve installation
Lines are placed to protect them from damage and to reduce future root conflicts. Valves are grouped in accessible valve boxes for serviceability.
Step 4: Controller setup (smart scheduling)
The controller is programmed by zone type. Many homeowners benefit from seasonal adjustments and rain/freeze sensors to prevent unnecessary watering.
Step 5: Final tuning (the part that saves water)
Heads are leveled, arcs adjusted, and run times dialed in. We look for overspray onto sidewalks/driveways and correct it to reduce water waste.
Local angle: San Antonio watering rules + how to set your controller
Water rules can vary by drought stage, but a system should always be set to water during allowed hours and avoid runoff. SAWS “year-round watering rules” (when the city is not under a specific drought stage) allow irrigation system watering during overnight and early-morning/late-evening windows. During drought stages, schedules may be restricted further (including assigned days). A well-designed system makes these adjustments easy because turf zones, drip zones, and sunny/shady zones are already separated.
Scheduling tips that work well in San Antonio
Backflow protection (don’t skip this)
Backflow prevention protects the drinking water supply from contamination. In San Antonio, backflow prevention assemblies may require annual testing under local program requirements. If your irrigation setup includes chemical injection, higher-level backflow protection may be required. When we install or service irrigation, we pay close attention to backflow placement, accessibility, and long-term testability.
Request an irrigation quote or schedule a sprinkler system install
Blades of Glory Landscaping helps homeowners and property managers across San Antonio and the Hill Country install and maintain irrigation that’s efficient, consistent, and designed for real-world conditions—heat, slopes, clay, and changing watering rules.
FAQ: Sprinkler system installation in San Antonio
How many zones do I need for a typical home?
Most properties do best when turf is split by sun exposure (front vs. back, sunny vs. shaded) and beds are on separate drip zones. The right number depends on yard size, slope, and whether you have narrow strips or large open turf.
Is drip irrigation better than sprinklers?
Drip is typically best for beds, shrubs, and trees because it targets roots and reduces evaporation. Sprinklers (sprays/rotors) are usually better for turf coverage. Many of the most efficient systems use both.
Why does my system water unevenly even with new heads?
Common causes include pressure issues, incorrect spacing, mismatched nozzles, blocked filters (especially on drip), or zones that mix turf and beds. A tune-up often fixes this without replacing everything.
Do I need backflow prevention for irrigation?
In many cases, yes. Backflow prevention protects the potable water supply. Depending on your setup and local requirements, annual testing may also be required. We can help you understand what applies to your property.
How soon can I water after sod installation?
New sod needs frequent, lighter watering at first, then transitions to deeper, less frequent cycles as roots establish. Timing depends on weather, shade, and turf type—especially during hot, windy weeks. Sod installation in San Antonio.
