Farmers Cut Costs With Water Blades

Across rolling farmland, growers are trading rotary mowers and chemical defoliants for a tool more commonly seen in city shipyards: the high pressure water jet pump. Mounted on a three-point hitch and fed from a slim polyethylene tank, the device fires a horizontal blade of water that slices through unwanted suckers, covers, or volunteer corn stalks without touching the cash crop. The cut is so clean that plant wounds close quickly, reducing the entry points for disease that often follow mechanical shredding.
The savings add up in unexpected ways. There is no need to sharpen blades mid-season, no diesel-drinking flail mower to maintain, and no herbicide bill drifting onto the accounting ledger. Organic growers especially value the approach because it satisfies certification rules while still giving them the tidy rows buyers expect. Early adopters report that one pass along berry canes or vineyard cordons takes less time than string-trimming, and the only residue left behind is a faint mist that settles like morning dew.
Perhaps the greatest benefit is flexibility: a quick twist of the regulator softens the stream enough to groom delicate strawberry beds, while full pressure knocks down thick hemp stalks. With water sourced from an on-farm pond or captured roof runoff, the operation feels less like an expense and more like putting summer rain to work twice.
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