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Container Gardening Tips

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Uncategorized

Apr. 26, 2012

Avatar of Cathy Adams

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Cathy is a long-time writer and novelist with an avid interest in gardening. She has served as an editor at Southern Living and Portico magazines, a creative writing instructor, among other achievements.


Whether you farm-at-home a three foot wide third floor balcony downtown or three acres in the country, anyone with access to the outdoors can enjoy container gardening.

 

CONTAINER OPTIONS INCLUDE:

–Traditional terra cotta and decorative pots, including faux stone materials that are light weight and easily moveable, to creative and whimsical repurposing of ordinary house and garden objects.

 

–Windowboxes and hayracks

 

–Hanging baskets

 

A rusted iron bed frame becomes a container flowerbed.A tall urn adds vertical interest to a patio.Wooden flower boxes should have metal liners to protect the wood.

When choosing plants to fill containers, keep eye level in mind.  Will you be looking down on it, up at it, or straight across it?

Upper story window boxes call for more dramatic groupings than pots on a small front stoop.

 

Metal hay racks with coconut liners are easy to install on porch railings.

 

DESIGN RULE OF THUMB FOR FILLING A CONTAINER:

 

–Thriller, filler and spiller-or “reach for the stars and the ground”

 

Thriller-a taller, vertical element rising from the center as a focal point

Good options include fountain grass, plumbago, large caladium

 

A large caladium makes a central statement.

 

 

 

 

Filler-lower growing, massing anchoring the body of the pot or box

Depending on light conditions, group seasonal bedding plants such as impatiens, marigolds, geraniums, annual salvias, petunias, lantana

 

 

 

 

 

 

Spiller-plants that weep or spread over perimeter

‘Marguerite’ and ‘Blackie’ sweet potato vines, Swedish ivy, bacopa, calibrachoa, trailing lantana

Marguerite sweet potato vine and lantana spill over the edges of an urn.

 

THE BIG THREE-SOIL, SUN AND WATER:

 

–Around Birmingham, where heavy red clay prevails, a container can be a gardener’s best shot at achieving perfect soil

 

For healthy container planting, avoid using garden soil and instead invest in an inexpensive bag of commercial potting soil, amending with a few handfuls of peat moss,  moisture saver polymer pellets for locations receiving full sun, and time release fertilizer such as Osmocote

 

–Read sun or shade requirements on tags when selecting plants

 

Full sun=6 hours direct sun (morning preferred) necessary for most flowering plants

Partial sun=3-6 hours morning or early afternoon sun, protected from hot late afternoon sun

Full shade=less than 3 hours direct sun per day, suitable for impatiens and foliage plants such as hostas, ferns and sedums

 

–As a general rule, containers need a good drink of water every day

 

Good drainage is essential-make sure that containers have adequate holes in the base and layer bottom of pot with small pebbles or broken pieces of terra cotta before adding soil

 

DIY irrigation is easy to install with inexpensive tubing and mister heads, available at home improvement centers, attached to a faucet with a battery powered timer.  Before leaving town for extended vacations in summer, invest in new batteries!

 

Be water wise-water early mornings or evenings rather than mid-day to minimize evaporation

 

CHOOSING CONTAINER PLANTS:

 

–Study plant tags and take advantage of professional advice from local nursery and plant shop personnel to assemble plants with similar light and water requirements

 

–Measure containers and take pictures to help garden shop personnel in making recommendations

 

At the plant shop, group the plants on the ground to evaluate configuration

 

–Come up with a color scheme and a theme

 

Primary colors sizzle-particularly pleasing around a swimming pool and magnets for birds and butterflies

Bright primary colors say summer.

 

Monochromatic colors soothe-pastels, whites and neutral greens and gray create a cooling mood

Use varying textures and colors of foliage for interest

 

 

 

English cottage garden-an exuberant mixture of soft and bright colored blossoms

A grouping of terra cotta and stone pots creates an English garden.

 

Formal-small shrubs underplanted with one color flower, especially white

 

–Consider the times of day and seasons you are most often outdoors

 

Pastels perform in early morning and twilight and popular as spring bloomers

 

 

 

 

 

 

Strong colors such as red or orange perform best in mid-day sun and reach full potential mid-summer

White blossoms and silvery foliage reflect moonlight for after dark drama

Gold, bronze, rust, and purple react well in autumn sunlight

Jewel toned colors perform in autumn light.

 

 

Transition with the seasons–misty colors in springhotter hues mid-summerjewel tones for fallintensely colored pansies paired with parsley, lavender or rosemary for color throughout winter

 

–Annuals, perennials, shrubs, herbs and vegetables

 

Annuals (plants with a single season life cycle) include flowers marketed as bedding plants

Consider replacing and supplementing annuals as the growing season progresses-when lovely-in-spring petunias limp in July heat, pop lantanas in their places

 

An urn in summer.

 

 

The same urn in fall.

 

 

 

Planted with rosemary, pansies and parsley for winter.

Perennials such as small shrubs (miniature boxwoods, Fatsia japonica, dwarf conifers), ferns, or perennials such as lambs ears serve as “permanent” plantings, accessorized with seasonal fillers

 

Herbs and tomatoes planted in pots are functional for culinary use as well as decorative.

Some herbs, such as parsley and thyme, make attractive fillers when combined with flowers.  Mints are marauders when planted in a bed and should always be confined to pots.

 

Pots of herbs placed by the kitchen door are handy for cooking.

 

MAINTAINING CONTAINERS:

 

–Fertilize on a regular basis with a balanced 20-20-20 or blossom booster plant food

 

–For continued bloom, dead head spent blossoms of flowers such as geraniums and marigolds. 

 

Trailing plants such as sweet potato vines need occasional trimming to reduce weight on stems.

 

Impatiens and begonias can start to look leggy by late summer–shear them early July for a fresh start fall.

 

GOOD PLANTS FOR CONTAINERS:

Thrillers:

Purple fountain grass

Large caladiums

Plumbago

 

Fillers:

Geraniums

Annual salvias

Lantana

Begonias

Petunias

Impatiens

Dusty Miller

Coleus

 

Spillers:

Scaevola

Ivy

‘Marguerite’ and ‘Blackie’ sweet potato vines

Bacopa

Hellchrysum

‘Wave’ series petunias

Trailing lantana

Calibrachoa

 

Tomatoes and herbs:

Rosemary

Thyme

Basil

Sages

Fennel

Dill

Parsley

Small tomatoes such as ‘Saladette’ and ‘Mountain Magic’

Lavender

Kale

 

Small shrubs:

Dwarf Norfolk pines

Miniature hollies

Fatsia Japonica

Roses

 

Bulbs:

Plant tulips and hyacinths under pansies for a winter-spring transition

Tulips in a hayrack are bulbs treated as annuals.

 

 

 

 

Vines to climb railings or mailboxes:

Moonflower

Morning glory

Black eyed Susan vine

Hyacinth bean

Mexican flame

Mandevilla

Blue sky vine

 

 

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