Growing in containers
Containers, perennials and herbs
Skills For Growing

This lesson covers skills for growing food in containers of variable size.

Some key points:

  • A pot or container is anything holding compost – it could even be an old bath; the important thing is good drainage.
  • Drainage is to enable water to run away from the bottom, and is not improved by crocks in pots.
  • A pot’s measurement, as given in this chapter, is the diameter across its top.
  • Beds of compost spread on soil are not ‘containers’ because plant roots go down and soil life moves up, so a bed becomes part of the garden soil, even though it looks like it is sitting op top.
  • However beds can be placed and filled on concrete, as long as they are on a sufficient slope that water can drain away from the bottom.

Growing in containers requires more time compared to growing in soil, especially the time taken for regular watering. An informed choice of which vegetables and varieties to grow can give a fair return on this investment of time, and pleasure in the growing.

If you have space for even a small bed, preferably filled with compost rather than soil, you can grow a lot of harvests through one season and more easily than in pots.

September – Garden Pearl tomato plants in 25 cm / 10 in pots, transplanted in May; they are growing in multipurpose compost and I have fed them three times
February – winter salads, planted in September in boxes and pots of half compost / half manure; no feeds given and greenhouse grown
Compost
An easy container harvest
Growing in pots
Growing under cover
Step 15
Step 15
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