 Alright, so we're going to look at some of our drip irrigation components and as you can kind of see on the table there's lots of materials that we can use for different ways that we may want to irrigate our landscape or our gardens. But the main thing that we're going to have to have is some kind of transport line. So if you're familiar with plumbing to your house or anything like that, most systems are done with PVC pipe and this little flexible tubing here it's a solid tubing just a soft plastic pipe. It's gonna be our transport line for all of our water movement. So from point A to point B from our water faucet to wherever trying to take our lines. Most of the time we're going to use this black tubing. If you're going a pretty good distance you can you know use PVC and put it in the ground and then come out to this black tubing if need be. But for the most part we're going to use this black tubing as our transport line. And the cool thing about drip is I always tell people it's kind of like a Lego set. You can basically modify it and build it however you want to for different shapes for different curvatures of shrub beds or gardens. So it can really be modified in a lot of different ways. But this is going to be our main transport line that's going to carry water. We're going to have lots of different fittings from elbows to tees and I'm going to show you how these hook up to the pipe here in just a little bit. There's straight connections for maybe a busted pipe that we need to fix. We can add a straight connection there to that. We can add little ball valves so if I need to be able to shut the water on and off while the system is still running I can install these little ball valves onto the systems. And then we're going to have connections for hose fittings. Obviously most of the time our water supply is going to be a water hose so we're trying to go from a water hose to our system. And all these are going to have little built-in filters for them to help filter the water. Like I said we can hook up water hoses and get from that water hose pipe down to that transport line that we're going to use to move water throughout this system. Once we've got water going where we want to and we need to start administering water to like I said shrub beds or vegetable gardens or whatever we're trying to water there's lots of different options for that. There's lots of different sizing. There's a smaller tubing but some of this tubing has built-in emitters. Okay so it's got a built-in water regulator into the pipe. It's only going to let water drip at a certain rate. This particular tubing is a fourth of gallon per hour or per minute. Okay so and that is they're on six inch spacing so for every six inches there's an emitter that's letting a fourth of gallon of water out per hour on that. And there's different sizes tubing that you can use. That emitter will come in the same size pipe as our transport line. And like I said they could be anywhere from six inches to 24 inches just to spend it depending on the spacing that you need and the water flow that you need. So lots of different options. And then for our solid piping we also have the option of putting emitters on there. Okay so it may be a solid pipe and we want to add emitters. Maybe we don't have a set spacing like every 12 inches. Maybe we're doing ornamental beds or something like that or we're trying to run to a tree or we're trying to run to a shrub. And we need we need different distances for for that material. And there is just numerous, you can kind of see I've got these in little bags, just numerous little emitters that can be added to these pipes to regulate water. And they come in the same flow rates. It could be quarter gallon, could be half gallon, could be one gallon an hour depending on the type of plant that you're trying to supply water there. It can be modified just about to anything that you want. These systems come with a little tool okay for those solid pipes. So if this pipe is that I'm using is a solid pipe and I want to add any emitter. Obviously it doesn't have any opening so no water flow is going to come out of this. But if I want to add any emitter this little tool goes in there and it pops right in. You can see how it pops into the pipe there. You can just kind of twist that to get that out of there. And then we can get any of our little emitters that we want to use. Here's a good one that we can use. So I've got my little I've got my little hole there that I've put in there and I want to add any emitter. Okay so I'm going to take my emitter and I'm just going to pop it right into the pipe. As you can see there I've added any emitter to a solid pipe there and I can run that to anything I want to. Like I said if I want that to water a tree or something I can have that go in there. I can put these at any spacing that I want to and I can pick the gallon per hour that I want to supply. So I might have one go into a tree that's obviously supplying a low water flow versus maybe some herbaceous plants or something like that that I've got in the landscape there. So lots of different options lots of different components that we can use for that. As you can see here we're going to look at this here in just a minute. I'm going to show you how to hook this up. This is a battery timer that we can use for drip irrigation just to basically let us be hands-off just like a just like a hardwired system. We can leave our water on and let this control the water flow to our gardens. If you notice I've got a pressure reducer here on the bottom. Drip irrigation obviously is low flow. So we want to put that on there just to reduce that that flow down as much as we possibly can. Then this is going to work off the system. But we'll look we'll look at how that hooks up in a separate little little clip here in just a second but just wanted to show you that. But as you can see it's lots of components that make up this system but they're all relatively easy to use. And I'm going to do one here in just a second where we look at kind of how to put some of these pieces on there and kind of shape that our system the way that we'd like to see it go.