Hey there! Kim and I both started gardening for the first time this year. Neither of us had ANY idea what we were doing in the beginning and we continue to try and find our way :)
Kim mentioned last week that she has started a garden in raised beds that her hubby built for her! I have also started a garden, but due to my SMALL yard and having our house on the market, I thought container gardening would be the best way for me to go.
I am completely clueless about gardening.. so I am learning right along with you! I started my hunt for containers which was a whole process in itself! Those darn things can be expensive! So here is what I found as alternatives (thanks to other mamas!) to buying them from a nursery:
- You can slice open bags of top soil or potting soil and plant your fruits and veggies right into the opening (someone also suggested doing this with bails of hay)
- Use 18 gallon rubbermaid containers and drill holes in the bottom for drainage. They sell them at home depot for $3.50 a container. They aren’t the prettiest so make some paint and have your kids decorate them!!!
- Curb Shop! Watch on garbage day and drive around with an empty trunk! People are always looking to buy new containers for the spring so they throw out the old.
- You can use a food-grade 5 gal bucket and drill some 1/2″ holes in the bottom.
- Go to your local nursery and see if they will give you some of the cheap black plastic pots they use for their plants (that is what we did and so we got our containers for FREE! )
Things I have learned so far:
- A good rule of thumb is to plant after Mother’s day to avoid risk of frost. If you plant before this, watch the weather for frost. All you have to do is lay a sheet over your plants
- With any vine, you need to purchase the “cages” so they can climb. (like the one in the tomato plant pic)
- From what I have, everything has been super easy to grow and has grown really fast, except for the strawberries and blueberries.
- If your plant didn’t come with an identification card, make your own out of wood paint sticks you can get for free from any store that sells paint (like the one in the chives pic)
- Critters LOVE plants! We had a family of groundhogs living under our shed. They destroyed all of my kale and spinach plants :( We put peppermint oil on cotton balls and dropped them in their holes and haven’t seen them since!
- Containers give you a limited space that you don’t get a ton of crop (which I knew, but still a little bummed…)
{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }
Well my father really loves planting different kinds of plants, one example vegetables like corn, tomatoes. but is it okay to plant this on a container?
From what I know… Yes, tomatoes are super easy in a container!! No, corn is a lot harder because it has to be planted in rows so they can germinate each other so I would not do corn in a container. Hope this helps!