How to make a garden more drought-resistant?
Here are some tips to make your garden more drought resistant: 

1. Mix compost into your plant soil. This increases the soil’s capacity to hold water and prevent water pooling and root rot as well. 

2. Mulch your plantings. A 5 to 8cm layer of organic mulch shades the soil and slows evaporation. 

3. Choose plants that tolerate drought and a wide range of temperatures. Plants that are native to particular regions require less moisture and can help make life easier for stressed wildlife

4. Minimize and drought-proof your container plantings, as these requires more water than ground plants. 

5. Cut down on mowing and fertilizing. Mow during the coolest part of the day and leave the clippings on the ground as compost.

6. Reduce your lawn as it consumes a large amount of water and consider drought resistant landscaping instead.

7. Use conserving watering equipment. Watering cans, soaker hoses and drip systems minimize evaporation by sending water directly to the soil instead of spraying it into the air. 

8. Water your plants early in the morning, since water doesn’t evaporate as readily in cooler morning temperatures as it does in the heat of the afternoon. You can do it in the evenings, too, but water sitting on leaves overnight may cause fungal diseases.

9. Water less frequently but deeply. Frequent, shallow watering leads to weak, shallow-rooted plants; Less frequent, thorough watering encourages roots to grow deeper.

10. Put off major planting projects until after severe droughts, since newly established plants tend to require a lot of irrigation.