Container Gardening Ideas For The Many Different Garden Pots
by Mary Hanna
For container gardening ideas, search the internet,
the library or a bookstore. The challenge is to come
up with a pleasing container garden design. There are
an unlimited variety of containers available for your
container garden. These range in size from small house-plant
pots to large boxes and planters. Equally variable are the
materials from which they are made. These include wood, glass,
clay, aluminum, bamboo, straw, plastic, fiberglass, terra cotta,
tin, cast iron, zinc, copper, and brass, each with certain advantages
and disadvantages. What you select will depend on availability,
cost, background, and appeal not to mention the characteristics
of the gardening pots.
Here are some container gardening ideas. In addition to traditional
circular pots and tubs, there are modern and ultra-modern forms--square,
rectangular, triangular, hexagonal, and octagonal. Also eligible are old
iron kitchen pots, kettles, pails, jugs, casks, vases, crocks, jelly tubs,
barrels and nail kegs, Japanese fish tubs, old sinks, bathtubs, bamboo soy tubs.
There are novelty containers such as driftwood, wheelbarrows, donkey carts, spinning
wheels and boxes attached to roadside mail receptacle. There are also bird
cages, decorative well heads, animal figures, and Strawberry
jars. Woven baskets may be used to conceal unattractive containers.
Even tar paper pots, handled by garden centers and florists, are
worthwhile if painted or covered to improve their appearance.
Any of these can be used in your container gardening ideas.
Where to find your container supplies? Start with what you have.
If you scout cellars or basements, attics, garages, and sheds,
you will doubtless encounter something interesting.
Old-fashioned pots and kettles, often sold in antique shops
at country auctions or seen at old New England inns, have
much appeal.
Other container garden ideas are to consider old cookie and
bean jars, pickle and other types of crocks, wash tubs, coal
pails, jardinières, and ceramic bowls. For drainage, spread a
thick layer of large pebbles or broken pieces of pots or bricks
at the bottom and then water plants with care. In large containers
of this kind, drainage material should be several inches thick.
Where rainfall is heavy, be sure to keep garden containers without
drainage outlets on porches, under awnings or the broad eaves of
houses. With pails and old galvanized wash tubs, holes can be easily
punctured at the bottom.
Plants in containers without drainage openings remain moist
longer. Some of these--crocks, jardinières and cookie jars--are
heavy enough to be secure against wind in outside container
gardening.
What constitutes the ideal container for your container
garden ideas? A container must be attractive, even if it
is not an object of art. It should be strong and durable
and able to resist all kinds of weather. This is especially
true of the large sizes, which usually remain outdoors all
year around. In the North, alternate freezing and thawing is
a problem in winter (and could cause cracking); in tropical
climates, excessive heat, humidity, and moisture are to be
considered (and could cause fading). And in semiarid areas,
there is the effect of scorching sun to keep in mind, another
cause of fading. All these things must be kept in mind when
coming up with your container gardening design.
The ideal container must be large enough to hold a substantial
amount of soil. It should have good drainage facilities through
holes or other openings at the bottom or sides, though this is
not absolutely necessary. It must not rust, at least in a single
season, and it should have a wide enough base to rest firmly
wherever placed. Besides, it ought to be heavy enough to
withstand average winds. In severe storms, like hurricanes and
tornadoes, movable containers can be shifted to temporary safety.
All of these things should be factored in when you are coming up
with your container gardening ideas.
Resistance to rot is another requirement. Wooden containers--except
those made of rot-resistant redwood, Western cedar, and Southern
red cypress--will need to be treated with a wood preservative.
Except for permanent containers, the ability to move your container
garden is another feature, and sometimes a safety precaution, of
portable container gardening. Large boxes and planters can be
fitted with wheels, and garden centers have redwood tubs that rest
on platforms with wheels. A hole in the platform corresponds to the
hole in the tub. Large containers without wheels can be pushed on
iron or wooden rollers by two or more persons; however, if you live
in an area prone to disastrous storms it is best to keep your
containers small.
Smaller containers are ideal for growing herb container gardens.
If you plan to plant an herb container garden be imaginative
Here are some container garden ideas for herbs that go well
together.
* For an Italian selection try Sweet basil, Italian parsley,
Oregano, Marjoram and Thyme. * For a lovely scented container
use Lavender, Rose scented geranium, Lemon balm, Lemon thyme,
and Pineapple sage. * For really great salads try Garlic chives,
Rocket, Salad burnet, Parsley, Celery. * And to say "We love
French Cooking!" use Tarragon, Chervil, Parsley, Chives and Sage.
Any of these will liven up your cooking and please your family.
So these are just a few container gardening ideas. Get out a
pad of paper and make up a container garden design that will
please the eye and maybe even the palate.
Happy Container Gardening!
Copyright © 2006 Mary Hanna All Rights Reserved.
About the Author
About the Author Mary Hanna is an aspiring herbalist
who lives in Central Florida. This allows her to grow
gardens inside and outside year round. She has published
other articles on Cruising, Gardening and Cooking. Visit
her websites at
CruiseTravelDirectory.com,
ContainerGardeningSecrets, and
www.GardeningHerb.com
or contact her at
mary@webmarketingreviews.com
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