OOH!! My mom has a few she'd probably let me use, so I'll totally do some peppers, too (or more tomatoes..... hmm....) Thanks for the reminder!I used 5 gallon buckets for tomatoes and peppers. It makes moving easier.
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OOH!! My mom has a few she'd probably let me use, so I'll totally do some peppers, too (or more tomatoes..... hmm....) Thanks for the reminder!I used 5 gallon buckets for tomatoes and peppers. It makes moving easier.
I've seen corn grown in buckets too. If container gardening is your thing you can get away with corn surrounded by salad greens in a five gallon bucket. Just be sure to incorporate a food amount of compost and feed with some Nitrogen fertilizer after 6 weeks. Natural fertilizer like compost tea and well composted manure work perfect. Make sure there's drainage in the bucket too is it is outside.I used 5 gallon buckets for tomatoes and peppers. It makes moving easier.
Terra-cotta is pretty but I’d rather have plastic. Terra-cotta heats up and dries out too fast, its hard to move, cracks in winter and is expensiveMy first year here, before I got the raised beds in, I did a lot of container gardening & hated it. As Aaron said, I was watering twice a day & stuff was still cooking - especially in terra cotta pots. Never mind going away for a weekend, that just wasn't possible. But I still do some things in containers, all my herbs are in them, but much bigger ones now & no terra cotta!
Today is the calm before the storm I think. Cold, but sunny. I just keep telling myself to enjoy the snow that's coming because, hopefully, it's the last of it!Then I realize it's only the middle of Feb.
I need to top off all the waterers & feeders so I don't have to go out in snow & grab another bale of straw. Or maybe I have enough leaves...
Have a good one!
That's the same case for just about all containers.Just remember on the 5 gallon buckets, in summer months the root mass can get very hot since it's above ground etc, no real heat sink, and you can kill plants real fast that way. Don't know how many buckets of potatos i nuked before I came to that Epiphamy. Since you are also heating up all of it so much more they will take a lot of water too, you may find yourself watering some stuff twice a day to keep it from wilting from drying out.
Aaron
Terra-cotta is pretty but I’d rather have plastic. Terra-cotta heats up and dries out too fast, its hard to move, cracks in winter and is expensive
Wow! Terra-cotta is really expensive here. One plain pot big enough to hold a pepper plant is like $30.I'm not a fan of plastic & try to keep it out of my life as much as possible, but it does work much better for pots. Here in CT I can get terra cotta soooo much cheaper than plastic pots! & if I take the dirt out & turn them upside down for the winter they don't crack. (I'm talking unglazed, plain old terra cotta)