Ready to Start Your Dream Project?
March 11th, 2026
2 min read
By Bob Carr
I want to tell you about a homeowner in Columbia.
Not because his story is dramatic.
But because it’s common.
He was smart. Handy. Comfortable with tools. Watched YouTube. Did his research. Bought parts from the supply store.
And for a while, his DIY irrigation system “worked.”
Then Maryland summer hit.
And that’s when everything changed.
If you’re considering installing your own irrigation system — or you already did — this story might sound familiar.
They Ask. Bob Carr Answers.
The homeowner had a 1/3-acre lot in Columbia.
He decided to install a sprinkler system himself to save money.
He rented a trenching machine. He laid poly pipe. He installed 4 zones. He used a mid-level smart controller.
Total DIY cost in materials and rentals:
Approximately $2,800.
He felt good about it.
And for the first few weeks, everything seemed fine.
By mid-July, he noticed:
He adjusted runtimes.
He replaced a few nozzles.
Still inconsistent.
That’s when he called us.
After evaluating the system, we discovered:
The system wasn’t “broken.”
It was poorly designed.
And that’s the difference.
Here’s what he had already invested:
Now he needed correction.
We recommended:
Total correction cost:
$3,400
Combined total investment:
$6,200
Which is what a professionally installed system would have cost originally.
Within 30 days:
Within one season:
He told me something interesting:
“I thought I was saving money. I didn’t realize I was just delaying the right solution.”
DIY wasn’t a failure.
It was an education.
But irrigation is hydraulics.
And hydraulics require engineering.
DIY may work if:
But most homeowners underestimate design complexity.
It’s not just parts in the ground.
It’s performance over time.
Is DIY always more expensive long-term?
Not always — but often if design errors occur.
Can a DIY system be corrected?
Usually yes, if pipe infrastructure is solid.
How much does a professional install cost in Maryland?
$5,000 – $9,000 for most residential properties.
There’s nothing wrong with being handy.
But irrigation isn’t just trenching and connecting pipe.
It’s design, math, and long-term system performance.
After 42 years in the DMV, I can tell you this:
A well-designed system costs less over time than a system that “mostly works.”
If you’ve tried DIY and it’s not performing the way you hoped, you’re not alone.
We’ll evaluate it honestly and tell you whether it’s worth correcting or rebuilding.
They asked. Bob Carr answered.
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