The phone rang at 5 a.m. on a sweltering July morning in 2018. My neighbor Michael sounded desperate. His corn leaves were curling, and stress was spreading across forty acres.
“I’ve been watering every other day,” he said. “But I can’t figure out why my corn looks thirsty while yours looks perfect.”
That year changed everything for Michael and for many other farmers in our county. He learned to calculate crop water needs using evapotranspiration (ET) rates, and his yields turned around. Once he stopped guessing, water became a precise tool rather than a blunt instrument.
Water makes or breaks a growing season. Too little, and crops wilt. Too much, and roots suffocate in saturated soil.
The secret lies in knowing exactly how much water each crop needs – based on weather conditions and growth stages. Done right, ET-based irrigation can cut water costs by up to 30% and boost yields at the same time.
What Evapotranspiration Really Means
Picture your cornfield on a hot August afternoon. Moisture rises from the soil, while corn leaves release vapor into the air.
Together, evaporation and transpiration form evapotranspiration. Every plant acts like a pump, pulling water from roots to leaves, then into the atmosphere.
Farmers who ignore ET rates lose money.
A five-year University of Nebraska-Lincoln study found that skipping ET calculations wasted about 25% of irrigation water while still reducing yields. Farms that used ET scheduling increased corn yields by 18% and reduced water use by 22%.
I learned this the hard way in 2012. I stuck to my old calendar-based watering schedule during an unusually cool, humid July.
My soybeans didn’t need much water, but I irrigated anyway. Roots rotted, diseases spread, and I lost 15% of the crop. That mistake pushed me to adopt ET.
Plants send clear distress signals, but by the time you see curling corn leaves or folding soybean leaves, yield damage has already begun. ET rates let you act before stress sets in.
Reference Evapotranspiration: Your Daily Water Budget
Reference evapotranspiration (ET₀) tells you how much water a standardized grass surface would lose under current weather. Think of it as your baseline water budget for the day.
Weather stations calculate ET₀ using air temperature, humidity, wind, and solar radiation. You don’t need to crunch numbers yourself – ag weather networks such as California’s CIMIS, or state equivalents, publish daily ET₀ values. Many irrigation apps now deliver them straight to your phone.
Research shows that ET₀ shifts dramatically across seasons:
Tracking ET₀ daily gives you the foundation for precision irrigation. Every crop has its own water “personality,” and it changes with growth. Crop coefficients (Kc) adjust ET₀ values to match actual plant demand. Young corn plants with tiny leaves have Kc values near 0.3. By the reproductive stage, when the canopy is full, Kc rises to 1.2 or higher. Near maturity, values drop again as plants slow down. Dr. Terry Howell of the USDA Agricultural Research Service explains it simply: “Crop coefficients represent decades of data on actual crop water use. Using outdated or generic values can throw you off by 20% or more.” KC values don’t follow calendar dates – they follow crop growth. Early-planted corn may peak in mid-July, while later planting shifts the curve to August. Visual crop staging remains the best guide. Here’s a quick snapshot: The formula for daily crop water use looks simple: Irrigation efficiency is key. Sprinklers usually deliver 75–85%. Drip systems reach 85–95%. Furrow systems may hit only 60–75%. Ignore these adjustments and you’ll over- or under-water by wide margins. Salt in irrigation water complicates the math. Many crops need 10–20% extra water for leaching salts out of the root zone. Sensitive crops may need 25–30%. I learned that lesson in Texas cotton fields, where two years of missed leaching cut yields by 15%. ET-based scheduling replaces guesswork with real science. Weekly, I match ET₀ data with crop coefficients, then adjust for rainfall and soil conditions. Soil type plays a big role. Sandy soils need smaller, more frequent applications. Clay soils can hold more water, allowing less frequent but heavier irrigation. Research confirms the payoff: zone-specific irrigation based on soil type improved water use efficiency by 15–25% compared to uniform applications. Weather forecasts matter too. Skip watering if a storm is due in 48 hours. Ramp up irrigation during heat waves. In 2019, when ET₀ jumped to 0.45 inches per day during a heat wave, I increased irrigation frequency and saved my corn while neighbors suffered heavy stress losses. Automated weather-based systems now make these adjustments for you. Smart controllers pull ET₀ from weather stations, then modify irrigation schedules daily. A University of California study found that automated systems reduced water use by 20% and boosted yields by 12%. Weather impacts ET in ways many farmers underestimate: Humidity and wind matter as much as temperature. Dry air pulls moisture fast. Wind speeds up losses even more. ET rates provide the foundation, but technology brings them to life. The American Society of Agronomy reports that precision irrigation improves water efficiency by 20–30% and boosts yields by 10–15%. Switching to ET-based irrigation is a step-by-step process: Calibration is critical. Test actual application rates of your system. Small errors add up quickly. Record-keeping helps you spot patterns and fine-tune decisions year after year. Once you master the basics, you can refine further. ET-based irrigation goes far beyond conservation. It creates a clear path to higher profitability. Farmers who adopt it immediately see lower water and energy costs since pumps run only when truly needed. Yields rise as well, with research confirming gains of 10 to 20 percent compared to traditional calendar-based schedules. A USDA study highlighted the scale of the advantage, showing farms that scheduled irrigation with ET enjoyed 25 percent higher net returns than those relying on old methods. Systems also last longer because efficient scheduling prevents excessive run times and wear on equipment. Finally, automated controllers cut the amount of labor required, freeing up valuable time for other critical farm tasks. ET-based irrigation pays for itself quickly, both in reduced expenses and in stronger, more consistent harvests. ET-based water management also benefits soil and the environment. The Soil Science Society of America reports that proper irrigation can raise soil organic matter by 15–20% in five years. Technology is moving fast: By 2030, experts expect 60% of commercial farms to use IoT-based irrigation, cutting water use by 30% and raising yields by 15%. ET-based irrigation represents the biggest leap in water management since the invention of modern sprinkler systems. It turns water into a precision tool instead of a gamble. The process is straightforward: track ET₀, apply the right Kc, adjust for efficiency, and let science guide your timing. Layer in soil sensors, weather forecasts, and smart controllers, and you unlock consistent yield gains while cutting costs. Michael’s desperate call back in 2018 marked the turning point. He no longer waters by gut feeling. Now, his system runs on data, and his harvest reflects it. The same can be true for any farm. Start small – check local ET₀ each morning, learn your crop’s Kc values, and begin calculating. With each season, you’ll refine the process until irrigation is no longer a gamble but a science you can trust.
Season
Typical ET₀ Range (in/day)
Key Weather Factors
Spring
0.15 – 0.25
Warming temps, longer days
Summer
0.25 – 0.35
High heat, long days, low humidity
Fall
0.10 – 0.20
Cooling temps, shorter days
Winter
0.05 – 0.10
Cold temps, high humidity
Crop Coefficients: Turning Weather Into Crop Needs
Growth Stage
Corn Kc
Soybean Kc
Wheat Kc
Emergence
0.3–0.5
0.4–0.5
0.4–0.6
Vegetative
0.5–0.8
0.5–0.8
0.6–1.0
Reproductive
1.0–1.2
1.0–1.2
1.0–1.2
Maturity
0.6–0.8
0.7–0.9
0.4–0.6
The Simple Formula That Works
Smarter Scheduling
Weather-Driven Irrigation in Action
Weather Condition
ET Impact
Irrigation Response
Hot, Dry, Windy
+50% to +100%
Increase frequency/duration
Cool, Humid, Calm
-30% to -50%
Reduce irrigation
Moderate/Average
Baseline
Standard scheduling
Rainy, Overcast
-40% to -60%
Delay or skip irrigation
Precision Tools That Changed Farming
How to Put ET Into Practice
Advanced Approaches
Economic Payoff
Environmental Gains
The Future of Smart Irrigation
Conclusion – Turning Water Into Precision