sitetitle
 

 

Bedding is Fashion for the Bed

Is a Hot Tub for you Top 5 questions you need to Answer

Umbrellas For Patio

Grilling Gardening or Storm Watching Thermometers Provide the Numbers You Need

Prevent Water Damage in the Laundry Room

Autumn Wreaths Mark The Season

South Dakota Real Estate Step Away From The Rat Race

Silk Trees

Outdoor Furniture fit for Royalty

How To Make Your Room Look Larger

West Virginia Real Estate Forget Old Notions

Kill em Or Cure em

Indoor Hot Tubs vs Outdoor Hot Tubs

A Garden Pond With Goldfish

Wow Outdoor Tile Murals Any Image Any Size

How A Light Bulb Works and Other Interesting Tidbits

Use Water Efficiently

Choosing The Right Garden Parasol To Protect You And Your Family


The Container Vegetable Garden

  If you live in an apartment or town home, you probably think you don’t have enough space to grow vegetables. Lack of space is no longer an excuse since many modern vegetable varieties are perfect for growing in containers on a sunny window ledge or patio.

You can grow salad vegetables and herbs in almost any sunny spot and enjoy fresh ingredients all year round. Snipping off a sprig of fresh herbs from the window ledge garden in the kitchen while you are cooking cannot be bettered.

Here are some tips for the perfect container vegetable garden.

Choice of container. The easiest choice is to go to your local garden center or home improvement store and pick any gardening container that takes your fancy. There’s a wide variety available in plastic, ceramic, wood or clay. Before you pull out your credit card though, take a look around your home and see whatever containers you have lying around. Almost anything that will hold soil can be used for growing, whether it is an old bucket, an empty margarine container or an empty coffee can.

Any container you use must have sufficient drainage holes in the bottom. Make additional holes in containers that do not drain quickly after watering. Waterlogged soil will lead to soil-borne diseases and stunted plants. Stand the containers in a tray if these are indoors.

Using regular soil is not advisable for container plants, since soil is likely to have plant disease organisms and weed seeds. Soil less potting mixes are lighter, less likely to compact and hold moisture and plant nutrients well. These potting mixes can be purchased from any garden center.

Choice of plants. Almost any herb is suitable for a container vegetable garden. Basil, thyme, mint, parsley, chives and oregano are all good choices. Most salads can also be grown in containers. Consider lettuce, young salad carrots, radishes, and green onions, for smaller containers. Tomatoes, eggplant and peppers do well in a larger container on a sunny patio or balcony. Choose dwarf varieties where these are available.

Seeds can either be planted either directly into the container or started in a smaller pot and transplanted once large enough to handle. Always plant more seeds than you need in each container since there will seldom be 100% germination. During the winter, seeds can be encouraged to grow early when placed next to a water heater or other warm (not hot) place. Make sure that you move these to a sunny position as soon as they appear above the soil.

Ideally, containers should be placed where they receive at least 6 hours of sunlight per day. Plants that bear fruit, such as tomatoes, peppers and eggplants require the most sun. Many herbs and leafy vegetables will tolerate more shade. Plants growing in containers require frequent watering especially if outdoors. During the hot summer months many will require daily watering.

Plants will need fertilizer during the growing season. The easiest way to add fertilizer is to use a commercial mix such as Miracle-Gro. Follow the directions and do not over feed. Most potting soils will have sufficient nutrients for the first few weeks.

Harvest when the plants are mature but still young and tender. Small sprigs of most herbs can be clipped as needed and the plant will continue to grow.

About the Author

Vince Apps is the editor of a number of gardening sites including Manual of Gardening and Home Vegetable Gardening.

 Vince Apps

More Articles 

Wooden Garden Furniture - Matthew Anthony
Wooden Garden Furniture can be the ideal solution to various seating problems in your garden. You can add new seating areas to your garden by perhaps turning a path into a destination for a sit down or consider adding a few pieces of wooden...

Summer's Unexpected Outdoor Candelabra - Susan Penney
For picnic tables, decks, porches, patios, and sidewalks, decorators are using an unusual source of candle lighting. Fireplace candelabra—those candle holders intended for fireplaces—have moved outside for the summer! Fireplace candelabra were...

Safe Cleaning With Ladder Use Tips - Jason Murphy
Fall and spring are the two seasons closely associated to annual general cleaning and house maintenance. For gutter cleaning or window washing, ladders are the basic tools people reach for to start their cleaning chores. It doesn't matter if you...

Getting a goldfish Pond - William Berg
Goldfish ponds are a beautiful addition to any garden and a stunning focal point. Goldfish ponds have been admired in Asia for centuries, especially in China and Japan. Today, you will find goldfish ponds all over the world, including Europe...

Starting Vegetable Garden Seeds & Plants Indoors - David Selman Tracker Outdoors com
Starting Plants IndoorsSeeds can be germinated and seedlings started in a box, pan or flowerpot of soil in a window. In addition to having at least 6 hours of direct sunlight each day, the room must be kept reasonably warm at all times. Washed fine...

Hibiscus - Kent Pinkerton
This article provides useful, detailed information about Hibiscus. Hibiscus, sometimes called the queen of shrubs, was originally a native of Asia. It was then carried to the Polynesian Islands, the West Indies and...

Tips to Improve the Functionality and Atmosphere of Your Patio with Plants - Nicole Martins
When I began to create planting plans for clients in the mid 1990’s one of my main concerns was, how will this collection of plants; the greenery, the flowering, the size and the shape grow together to create an aesthetically pleasing arrangement...

Put A Graceful Charm In The Room With Wood Blinds - Low Jeremy
For a conventional type of house, wood blinds are seemingly perfect. This will provide light and privacy control within the room. If you want it to appear more beautiful and exotic, wood blinds can do it for you. Unlike the...

Stitching Memories - Caryl B Grecia
Sometimes, usual photographs look so common and boring. Converting your pictures into charcoal or oil painting is a welcome change but then, a lot of people have been into these crafts already that there are times when these portraits too, look...

Plan Before The Plan: Carrying Out Your Decking Projects - Rob Jones
Learn about the basic stages in preparing and executing a successful cedar decking project. A cedar deck offers all kinds of aesthetic and practical benefits to a property. It also adds value to a property as a whole. Making sure that all of the...

Introduction to bonsai tree growing: an overview - Cristina Diaz Garcia
The art of growing bonsais is an ancient oriental tradition, in which bonsai means "tray gardening". There are traces of bonsais (miniature trees or bushes) in Egypt, Japan and China, and it was considered that the miniature tree would have...

Your Farmhouse Renovation Project In The South Of France - Nick Dowlatshahi
You have just bought your gorgeous old farmhouse in the south of France and all it needs is some renovation and 'TLC' to become the home of your dreams! A word of caution! It is often all too easy to become wrapped up in your optimistic hopes...

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Copyright sitetitle @2007  Turnkey Websites
dining room sets
Self Build Insurance