
We are searching data for your request:
Upon completion, a link will appear to access the found materials.
Jupiterimages/Pixland/Getty Images
Container Garden Design
Container Garden Sizing & Drainage
How to Make Your Own Grow Bags
Grow bags offer a simple solution for anyone who wants a container garden but doesn’t have containers. Whether you’ve got a patio, a balcony, or simply a yard with poor soil, you can make as many grow bags as you wish for a relatively simple container garden.
Take a large, sturdy trash bag and place it in the desired location. If you think you may want to move your grow bag later, put a rug or piece of cardboard underneath it. Consider access to direct sunlight when you are deciding where to place your grow bag. For most plants, several hours of direct sun per day is desirable.
Put a layer of sand on the bottom of the bag for drainage. Then fill your grow bag with either a soil-less potting mix or a mixture of equal parts sand, loamy garden soil, and peat moss.
- Grow bags offer a simple solution for anyone who wants a container garden but doesn’t have containers.
- Whether you’ve got a patio, a balcony, or simply a yard with poor soil, you can make as many grow bags as you wish for a relatively simple container garden.
Water the soil thoroughly and close up the bag. Then you need to decide how you want to cut your grow bag.
You could turn the bag on its side, tuck under the closed end so the bag is shaped like a pillow, and then cut several holes where you can plant seedlings or seeds. Otherwise, you could leave the bag upright, fasten it closed, and poke several holes around the sides of the bag, where you can plant seeds, cuttings, or seedlings.
Check moisture in your grow bag frequently. In warm weather, daily watering may be necessary to keep plants from getting too dry.
Fertilize your plants regularly to provide the nutrients needed.
If you want a growing container that will last from year to year, consider constructing a sturdy grow tube out of wide PVC pipe. Add a cover for the bottom, a chain to hang it, and then drill holes in the sides.
Container Garden Color
Container Garden Texture
How to Create a Container Garden Out of a Bathtub
Place the out-of-use bathtub in an area of your yard that best suits your garden landscape theme. Depending on what you want to plant in the tub, place it in a sunny or a well-shaded place.
Fill the tub about half full of potting soil. Depending on the size of the tub use anywhere between 15 and 30 lbs. of potting soil.
- Water the soil thoroughly and close up the bag.
- You could turn the bag on its side, tuck under the closed end so the bag is shaped like a pillow, and then cut several holes where you can plant seedlings or seeds.
Add about 5 inches of peat moss to the top of the soil.
Select seeds for the plants you wish to grow in the bathtub. Wildflowers, rose bushes and creeping vines make exceptionally attractive choices for a bathtub container garden.
Plant the seeds into the layer of peat moss on top of the soil in the bathtub. Make sure to follow the directions on the seed packets for each plant you are wanting to grow, as some flowers require different depths of sowing.
Pair rose bushes and English ivy together to create a green, fragrant and flowing source of flora and foliage in your bathtub container garden.