Thanks for the reassurance Two_Sheds! I grew up in Pennsylvania.. winter usually involved about three feet of snow for five months.. it's a new experience, this 'growing' things over the winter-time.
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Container Veggies thread
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I'm pleased to see some of you grow courgettes in tubs as I was told by a neighbour that they grow too big for this and need much more root room. I have a large garden and don't grow a lot in pots but thought I'd try courgettes and tomatoes this year.
Penny
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Grow Your Own - Growing, How To Grow Tomatoes Growing Fruit & Veg - Recipe Advice, Organic food Gardening, Chickens, Seeds for Sale
Link to the social group for raised bed and container growers.
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This year I have horseradish in a huge pot. I shall have tomatoes in pots and that's about it I think. My mum does lots of lettuce in pots.Rachel
Trying to tame the mad thing called a garden and getting there I think!
My Garden Mayhem...inspirational blog for me I hope! - updated 16/04/09
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I am going to google both of those as I have never heard of Amaranth and can't remember ever seeing Rosebay willow herb .
Dutch , I grow everything in containers except my full size runners . This year we are experimenting . In hanging baskets I have , Hestia runner bean , snow peas , dwarf beans , tomato and 3 different kinds of strwberry . In troughs I have , or will have , cucumber , snow peas ,peas , corgette , chard , Spinach,2 types of tomato , cherry and ordinary ,Mixed salad leaves , chillies , carrot and spring onion .You can't move in my greenhouse at the moment , can't wait to get some outside and make more room .Last edited by divvy; 19-04-2009, 04:49 PM.
It has two chances , up or down.
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I'm growing anything I can get my hands on in pots, bottles etc.
Broccoli -> Failed, straight to seed
Raspberry -> Going great guns
Lettuce -> Seems to be pretty good; will try in a sandwich and see!
Grape -> Also seems to be happy (producing little 'bunchlets' (?))
Tomatoes -> Although started nearly dead (outside in winter) are all coming back to life
Radishes -> 100% dead. 3 x over. Using soil agent now to kill fly maggots... Eurgh
About to pot up blackberry, gooseberry, red currant and black currant. Expect them to work
Mark
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My best successes in pots have been;
carrots - perfect, never managed to get them to grow in the ground though!
salad potatoes - clean, easy to harvest
dwarf french beans - better crop from a big pot than the ones in the ground
petit pois peas - the ones in pots with copper tape round gave us early peas, the ones in the ground got munched
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Last year in pots I had:
Strawberries - fruited well
Peas - 3 to a pot and had lots of peas, although they were planted a little late.
Courgette - grew well, but no courgettes, probably because I planted late and had too many in one pot!
Carrots - again not a long enough growing season, but were tasty baby carrots when I harvested.
This year I have/ will have in pots/bags:
Tomatoes
Cucumbers
Peas
Courgettes
Carrots
Potatoes
Parsnips
Spinach
Lettuce
Salad Leaves
American Land Cress
Onions (in a trough - only one germinated so far!)
Brussel Sprouts (might not work, but no room in the ground! )
Sweetcorn (possibly...)
Strawberries
Blackberry
Currants (not sure of colour yet )
Gooseberry
Raspberrys
BlueberriesLast edited by Jenegade; 20-04-2009, 12:57 PM.
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Its interesting to see that carrots seem to do well in containers. I also watched a old gardeners world where carrots were grown in deep oil cans and did very well, did not catch the variety though. Maybe it is easier to control the conditions in a container and to keep on top of pests. I think I will search for a suitable container.BumbleB
I have raked the soil and planted the seeds
Now I've joined the army that fights the weeds.
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BumbleB....I believe I heard that carrot fly cannot fly above 30cm, so pots are much better!
I only have one bed that has enough sun for growing, I have:
Cobra French Beans
Polestar Runner Beans
PSB
Cauliflowers
Sprouts
Peas
Borlotto Beans
Onions
Garlic
Carrots
Strawberries
Gooseberry
Leeks
Potatoes (earlies and main crop)
pak choi
Lettuce (in a plastic baby bath!)
and shortly tomatoes as well....I'm sure I've forgotten something but you get the idea!My mind works like lightning, One brilliant flash and it is gone!
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Hi All,
I started planting out my container veg and flowers today and wondered if this tip might be of interest to someone:
I find that all containers need a lot of watering when the plants are fully grown, or in the warm weather. A way of keeping this under control cheaply for those of you with clay soil [or access to some] is to use a layer of sticky solid clay in the bottom of the container before filling up with planting compost - 2''-4'' will do depending on the container size. This can be dug from a spare part of the garden where the soil is not so good and is better for pots than any water retaining gel.
It still allows for the pot to drain - just much more slowly - so any really dry container will get properly wetted before the water runs off.
I've been practicing this for years and it saves a lot of watering time with my many containers and hanging baskets. It's also fertile so a good source of plant food.
Ann
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