Your search found 46 records
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 631.7.6.2 G232 HAN Record No: H033)
The following report describes the legal irrigation throughout turnouts to mesgas and reviews the design assumptions, legal implications and current utility of the existing methods in Egypt. The legal limitations currently imposed upon the turnouts, based on specific site measurements, are presented, together with the responses from the Ministry of Irrigation and farmers to the inadequacies of the current turnouts. Data collected from the field sites indicates the necessity of increasing the size of turnouts in accordance with irrigation demands for the season and crops grown throughout Egypt. The recommended larger capacity turnouts with adjustable gates includes the design modification requirements of modified inlet shapes and provision for trash guards. These larger gated turnouts will require an irrigation technician to assume the responsibility of the current gatekeeper function and to interface with the farmers regarding their irrigating scheduling. In addition to recommendations regarding closer management between the irrigation technician and the farmers, it is suggested that training centers be established to assist in the development of water distribution management methods between the irrigation engineers and the water user associations.
2 Lowdermilk, M. K.; Freeman, D. M.; Early, A. C.. 1978. Farm irrigation constraints and farmer's responses: Comprehensive field survey in Pakistan. Fort Collins, CO, USA: Colorado State University. 6 vols. xii, 130 p.; xiv, 146 p.; xxi, 263 p.; xxii, 250 p.; xiii, 52 p.; xviii, 319 p. (Pakistan Water and Power Development Authority publication no. 2)
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 631.7.6.2 G730 LOW Record No: H0361)
Vol. I - Summary; Vol. II - Purpose of the study, its significance and description of the irrigation system; Vol. III - Consequences of the present farm water management system; Vol. IV - Major constraints confronting farmers explaining the consequent low crop yield; Vol. V - Farmer responses to major constraints: Viable options under present conditions; Vol. VI - Appendices
3 Early, A. C.; Eckert, J. B.; Freeman, D. M.; Kemper, W. D.; Lowdermilk, M. K.; Radosevich, G.; Skogerboe, G. V. 1976. Institutional framework for improved on-farm water management in Pakistan. Fort Collins, CO, USA: Colorado State University. v, 88p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 631.7.6.2 G730 EAR Record No: H0348)
4 Lowdermilk, M. K.; Clyma, W.; Early, A. C.. 1975. Physical and socio-economic dynamics of a watercourse in Pakistan's Punjab: System constraints and farmers' responses. Fort Collins, CO, USA: Colorado State University. viii, 106 p. (Water management technical report no. 42)
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 631.7.6.2 G730 LOW Record No: H0323)
(6.66 MB)
(Location: IWMI HQ Call no: 631.7.8 G750 WAL Record No: H000446)
(1.73 MB)
6 Skogerboe, G. V.; Brewer, J. D.; Early, A. C.; Brown, F. B.; McConnen, R. J.; Fowler, D.; Henderson, C. 1984. Irrigation systems management project design report, Sri Lanka. Fort Collins, CO, USA: Colorado State University. 362p. (Water management synthesis report no.33)
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 631.7.1 G744 SKO Record No: H0794)
(Location: IWMI-India Call no: P 1310 Record No: H0807)
Examples are drawn from the Indus Basin to explain why on-farm water management problems restrict the output of agricultural products in many LDCs. Data are presented to illustrate the low level of water management knowledge of both the farmers and the current extension agents. Examples of the level of corruption and its effect on the operating system are illustrated. Several requirements that must be met before a large-scale irrigation scheme will actually increase the welfare of LDC farmers are presented.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 1407 Record No: H01369)
9 Early, A. C.; Bagadion, B. U. 1981. Custom fit design of farm ditches: A participatory approach to making irrigation systems responsive to the needs of the farmers. Training Module prepared for NIA Command Irrigation Committee Workshops, San Raphael, Bulacan, 12-14 March; Cebu, 19-21 March; and Davo, 26-28 March 1981. 12p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: F 631.7.1 G576 EAR Record No: H01412)
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 1081 Record No: H01414)
A specially designed irrigation water management calendar was used as an information source for farmers in a system-wide irrigation management study in the Lower Talavera River Irrigation System. The study was designed to determine ways to achieve an equitable supply of irrigation water throughout the system. The calendar was based on the monthly sequence of farming activities and had drawings and captions emphasizing positive irrigation behavior and improved water management practices. It was found that 75% of farmer irrigators learned new water management practices from the calendar. 20% used the calendar as a pattern or guide far farming activities and 16% used it to improve water management. Only 8% of the farmers admitted using it just to record farm activities. Negative behavior and source credibility of farmers were the only two variables found to be significantly associated with calendar effectiveness. Farmers with a high level of effectiveness tended to exhibit low negative behavior. Similarly, farmers who rated the calendar's effectiveness as high perceived the irrigation agency personnel as a highly credible source of information. Paper presented at the Crop Science Society Conference, Baybay, Leyte, 26-29 April 1980.
11 Lowdermilk, M. K.; Freeman, D. M.; Early, A. C.. 1977. Social and organizational factors for farm irrigation improvements: A case study. Paper presented at International Conference on Transfer of Water Resources Knowledge, 2nd, Fort Collins, Colorado, USA, 29 June - 2 July 1977. 21p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 380 Record No: H01757)
Farmers and their local organizations are not only the end receivers in the technology transfer process but are also means of effective horizontal transfer of technologies to other farmers. Farmer organizations are a requisite for the maintenance of many improved technologies which require collective action. The Pakistan case study describes the importance of this concept and the need for irrigation specialists to understand and utilize local farm organizations for water management improvement programs. The unique research-development process developed by Colorado State University in Pakistan has built- in mechanisms for the transfer and maintenance of technologies.
12 Freeman, M. D.; Lowdermilk, M. K.; Early, A. C.. 1978. Survey research methodologies for the analysis of irrigation systems - Use and limits. Paper presented at Workshop on Research Methodology in the Study of Irrigation Organization, Fort Collins, CO, USA, 1-3 May 1978. 29p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 713 Record No: H02292)
13 Early, A. C.. 1980. An approach to solving irrigation system management problems. In Report of a planning workshop on irrigation water management. Los Banos, Laguna, Philippines: IRRI. pp.83-113.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 631.7.8 G000 REP Record No: H02529)
14 Tapay, N. E.; Early, A. C.. 1987. Integrated research: Socio-economic evaluation of system-wide irrigation water management. Agricultural Administration and Extension, 25(1):1-12.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: PER Record No: H02892)
15 Moya, T. B.; Early, A. C.. 1980. Some findings on water distribution within the tertiaries of a gravity irrigation system. IRRI Saturday seminar, 12 April 1980. v.p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 634 Record No: H02390)
16 Early, A. C.. 1980. Irrigated crop production in Pakistan: Problems and prospects for the Indus food machine. IRRI Thursday seminar, 28 February 1980. 80p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 215 Record No: H02675)
17 Early, A. C.. 1981. Irrigation system management diagnosis and improvement methodologies developed in Central Luzon of the Philippines. Discussion paper prepared for the Workshop on Methodologies for Improved Irrigation System Management Research, Coimbatore, India, 21-26 September 1984. 25p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 885 Record No: H03934)
18 Sahni, B. M.; Tagupa, C. A.; Early, A. C.. 1981. Estimating water movement through flooded soils during crop growth in irrigated lowland rice fields: A progress report. Paper presented at IRRI Saturday Seminar, 26 September 1981. 34p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: 631.7.2 G730 SAH Record No: H03933)
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 400 Record No: H04002)
20 Chatchawalwong, W.; Early, A. C.. 1980. Agronomic factors limiting dry season cropping of three tank irrigation systems in Northeastern Thailand. Unpublished report. 29p.
(Location: IWMI-HQ Call no: P 243 Record No: H03967)
Based on a Master of Science Thesis in Agronomy completed at the University of Philippines, Los Banos, 1980
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