The Real Question Isn’t “Which Is Better?” It’s “Where Does the Water Need to Go?”

Denver-area landscapes often include a mix of lawn, shrubs, trees, and planting beds. That’s why many homeowners get frustrated with a one-size-fits-all irrigation setup.
Sprinklers are great for turf. Drip irrigation shines for beds and shrubs. If you choose the right tool for the right zone, you’ll get healthier plants with less water waste and fewer dry spots.
Calaway Sprinklers helps homeowners choose the best irrigation approach for each part of the yard—whether that’s sprinkler repair, drip installation, or upgrading zones for better coverage.
Sprinklers: Best for Lawns (When Coverage Is Right)
Sprinklers are designed to water broader areas evenly, which is exactly what turf needs.
Sprinklers usually make sense when:
- You have open lawn areas
- You need uniform coverage
- You want simple zone-based watering
Common sprinkler problems that waste water:
- Heads spraying sidewalks and driveways
- Mismatched nozzles (some areas get soaked, others stay dry)
- Low pressure from leaks or valve issues
- Poor placement that creates “dead zones”
If your lawn is patchy, it may not be the grass—it may be the watering pattern.
Drip Irrigation: Best for Beds, Shrubs, and Trees
Drip irrigation delivers water slowly near the root zone. Instead of spraying water into the air, it puts water where plants use it.
Drip irrigation is a great fit for:
- Garden beds
- Foundation plantings
- Shrubs and hedges
- Trees (especially when properly laid out around the dripline)
- Narrow strips where sprinklers overspray
Benefits homeowners notice:
- Less evaporation and wind drift
- Less water on weeds (because you’re not watering everything)
- More consistent moisture for plants
- Less runoff on slopes and compacted soil
- Cleaner look with less overspray mess
A Simple Rule of Thumb for Denver-Area Homes

- Lawn zones: sprinklers
- Planting beds/shrubs/trees: drip irrigation
- Mixed areas: split into separate zones whenever possible
Many yards work best with a hybrid setup: sprinklers for turf, drip for landscaping.
Signs It’s Time to Add (or Switch to) Drip
If any of these sound familiar, drip irrigation is worth considering:
- You’re constantly adjusting sprinklers to avoid soaking beds
- Plants look stressed even though you “water enough”
- You have runoff or puddling from spray heads
- Beds dry out faster than the lawn
- You’ve added new landscaping but irrigation never changed
Don’t Forget the Controller and Schedule
Even the best hardware can’t overcome a bad schedule. If your controller is outdated or inconsistent, upgrading the timer/controller can make watering more predictable—especially when your yard has different watering needs in different zones.
How Calaway Sprinklers Can Help
Calaway Sprinklers can:
- Fix sprinkler coverage issues and leaks
- Add drip zones for beds, shrubs, and trees
- Update timers/controllers
- Help homeowners reduce waste while improving plant health
Sprinklers and drip irrigation both have a place in Colorado landscapes. The key is using each where it performs best. If you want healthier turf, stronger plants, and less wasted water, Calaway Sprinklers can help you build an irrigation setup that actually matches your yard.


