Irrigation Service Areas in Lubbock & West Texas
Pro-Tech Irrigation provides center pivot repair, T-L system service, pump station support, drip irrigation, and water management consulting for farms across the Texas High Plains, with priority coverage around Lubbock, Morton, Cochran County, Hale County, Lamb County, and nearby South Plains communities.
Priority Center Pivot Service Zone
Our core service area follows the farms that depend on center pivot irrigation every week of the growing season: Lubbock, Morton, Levelland, Littlefield, Plainview, Brownfield, Tahoka, Muleshoe, Crosbyton, Floydada, and surrounding High Plains communities. These fields face the same operating pressures: wind, pressure loss, sprinkler package wear, pump efficiency, and Ogallala water limits.
Pro-Tech helps growers repair pivots, evaluate pump stations, update nozzles and regulators, plan irrigation scheduling, and choose T-L or other center pivot systems that match acreage, crop stage, well output, and season timing. During peak heat, the priority is simple: keep water moving evenly before a small issue turns into crop stress.
West Texas Counties Served
- Lubbock County
- Cochran County
- Hale County
- Lamb County
- Hockley County
- Terry County
- Lynn County
- Bailey County
- Crosby County
- Floyd County
- Dawson County
Southern States
The South is home to America's most diverse agricultural operations, from Texas cotton to Florida citrus.
Midwest States
The nation's corn and soybean belt, where irrigation technology maximizes yields.
Great Plains States
Where center pivot irrigation transformed American agriculture.
Western States
From California's Central Valley to the Columbia Basin, where water efficiency is paramount.
Don't See Your Area?
We're expanding our service areas constantly. Contact us to discuss irrigation services in your location.
Plan service for the specific site
Location pages describe regional availability, but the actual irrigation system, water source, equipment, access, and operating conditions must guide the work. Provide the site address or field location, an authorized contact, gate and road instructions, and the equipment involved. Note weather, soil, crop, livestock, traffic, or terrain conditions that may affect safe access.
Gather controller, pump, engine, valve, pivot, linear, pipe, and prior service information when available. Photograph identification plates and the wider installation without entering unsafe areas. Describe the symptom, when it occurs, and which zone or operating mode is affected. The qualified service team can determine what additional field checks are appropriate.
For planning requests, explain current capacity, seasonal timing, operating priorities, known constraints, and the intended outcome. For repair requests, state whether the system is shut down, partially operating, leaking, alarming, or showing pressure or distribution changes. Do not bypass safety controls or energize equipment to reproduce a condition.
Before a scheduled visit, confirm access and site procedures. Keep vehicles and stored materials away from the work area, identify known utilities, and communicate electrical, lockout, chemical, or other requirements. Update the service contact if conditions change. Afterward, retain findings, approved scope, product information, and follow-up notes with the system records.
Describe seasonal and operating context
State when the system is normally placed in service, when demand is highest, and whether the request is preventive or tied to an active interruption. Identify the zones, fields, or equipment that are still operating and those that should remain untouched. Note recent storms, freezes, heat, construction, vehicle activity, or other events that may relate to the observed condition.
Choose one site contact to coordinate arrival, access, operational questions, and the final review. Keep phone information current and identify an alternate if the primary contact cannot be present. The contact should understand the reported issue and have authority to confirm which system and area are included.
Keep location records consistent
Use stable names for fields, zones, pumps, controllers, and major equipment across maps, service requests, and internal records. Include the county, nearest access point, and directions when an address does not identify the work area clearly. Consistent labels reduce confusion when several properties or similar systems are managed by the same operation.
Maintain current access notes
Review directions and access notes seasonally and after road, gate, field, or equipment changes. Remove obsolete instructions, identify temporary restrictions, and keep the primary and alternate contact information current so the next visit begins with accurate site information.