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Wikipedia

Container garden

Container gardening or pot gardening/farming is the practice of growing plants, including edible plants, exclusively in containers instead of planting them in the ground.[1] A container in gardening is a small, enclosed and usually portable object used for displaying live flowers or plants. It may take the form of a pot, box, tub, basket, tin, barrel or hanging basket.

Container garden on front porch

Methods edit

Pots, traditionally made of terracotta but now more commonly plastic, and window boxes are the most commonly seen. Small pots are called flowerpots.[2] In some cases, this method of growing is used for ornamental purposes. This method is also useful in areas where the soil or climate is unsuitable for the plant or crop in question. Using a container is also generally necessary for houseplants. Limited growing space, or growing space that is paved over, can also make this option appealing to the gardener.[2] Additionally, this method is popular for urban horticulture and urban gardening on balconies of apartments and condominiums where gardeners lack the access to the ground for a traditional garden.[3]

Species edit

Many types of plants are suitable for the container, including decorative flowers, herbs, cacti, vegetables, and small trees and shrubs.[4] Herbs and small edible plants such as chili peppers and arugula can be grown inside the house, if there is adequate light and ventilation, and on outdoor terraces, larger vegetables may be planted.[citation needed]

Planting edit

 
An ornamental planter at Regent's Park, Inner London, England

Containers range from simple plastic pots, to teacups, to complex automatically watered irrigation systems. This flexibility in design is another reason container gardening is popular with growers. They can be found on porches, front steps, and—in urban locations—on rooftops. Sub-irrigated planters (SIP) are a type of container that may be used in container gardens.[4][5]

Re-potting edit

Re-potting is the action of placing an already potted plant into a larger or smaller pot. A pot that fits a plant's root system better is normally used. Plants are usually re-potted according to the size of their root system. Most plants need to be re-potted every few years because they become "pot-" or "root-bound". A plants' roots can sense its surroundings, including the size of the pot it is in, and increasing the pot size allows plant size to increase proportionally.[6]


Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Mills, Linn (29 January 2012). "Reap Benefits Of Container Gardening". Las Vegas Review Journal. Retrieved 1 January 2013.
  2. ^ a b "Welcome To The World Of Container Gardening". University of Illinois. Retrieved 1 January 2013.
  3. ^ Neville, Jayne (2008). Flowerpot farming : creating your own urban kitchen garden. Preston: Good Life. ISBN 1904871313.
  4. ^ a b Thompson, Al (18 December 2012). "Container Gardening Offers Many Benefits". Santa Maria Times. Retrieved 1 January 2013.
  5. ^ Note: SIP simply means watering from below, in large commercial applications it would not be strictly a container garden.
  6. ^ Society for Experimental Biology (1 July 2012). "Want bigger plants? Get to the root of the matter". (e) Science News. Retrieved 18 July 2014.

External links edit

  • University of Illinois Container Gardening Guide

container, garden, farm, redirects, here, marijuana, farming, cannabis, cultivation, gardening, farming, practice, growing, plants, including, edible, plants, exclusively, containers, instead, planting, them, ground, container, gardening, small, enclosed, usua. Pot farm redirects here For marijuana farming see Cannabis cultivation Container gardening or pot gardening farming is the practice of growing plants including edible plants exclusively in containers instead of planting them in the ground 1 A container in gardening is a small enclosed and usually portable object used for displaying live flowers or plants It may take the form of a pot box tub basket tin barrel or hanging basket Container garden on front porch Contents 1 Methods 1 1 Species 2 Planting 3 Re potting 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksMethods editPots traditionally made of terracotta but now more commonly plastic and window boxes are the most commonly seen Small pots are called flowerpots 2 In some cases this method of growing is used for ornamental purposes This method is also useful in areas where the soil or climate is unsuitable for the plant or crop in question Using a container is also generally necessary for houseplants Limited growing space or growing space that is paved over can also make this option appealing to the gardener 2 Additionally this method is popular for urban horticulture and urban gardening on balconies of apartments and condominiums where gardeners lack the access to the ground for a traditional garden 3 Species edit Many types of plants are suitable for the container including decorative flowers herbs cacti vegetables and small trees and shrubs 4 Herbs and small edible plants such as chili peppers and arugula can be grown inside the house if there is adequate light and ventilation and on outdoor terraces larger vegetables may be planted citation needed Planting edit nbsp An ornamental planter at Regent s Park Inner London England Containers range from simple plastic pots to teacups to complex automatically watered irrigation systems This flexibility in design is another reason container gardening is popular with growers They can be found on porches front steps and in urban locations on rooftops Sub irrigated planters SIP are a type of container that may be used in container gardens 4 5 Re potting editRe potting is the action of placing an already potted plant into a larger or smaller pot A pot that fits a plant s root system better is normally used Plants are usually re potted according to the size of their root system Most plants need to be re potted every few years because they become pot or root bound A plants roots can sense its surroundings including the size of the pot it is in and increasing the pot size allows plant size to increase proportionally 6 Gallery edit nbsp Balcony gardening at night nbsp Tomato plants growing in a pot farm alongside a small house in fifteen garbage cans filled with soil nbsp Senecio angulatus growing in clay and plastic pots on a verandaSee also edit nbsp Gardening portal nbsp Gardens portal Dutch flower bucket List of garden types Seedling Urban compostReferences edit Mills Linn 29 January 2012 Reap Benefits Of Container Gardening Las Vegas Review Journal Retrieved 1 January 2013 a b Welcome To The World Of Container Gardening University of Illinois Retrieved 1 January 2013 Neville Jayne 2008 Flowerpot farming creating your own urban kitchen garden Preston Good Life ISBN 1904871313 a b Thompson Al 18 December 2012 Container Gardening Offers Many Benefits Santa Maria Times Retrieved 1 January 2013 Note SIP simply means watering from below in large commercial applications it would not be strictly a container garden Society for Experimental Biology 1 July 2012 Want bigger plants Get to the root of the matter e Science News Retrieved 18 July 2014 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Potted plants University of Illinois Container Gardening Guide Container Vegetable Gardening Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Container garden amp oldid 1223100222, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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