Posts Tagged ‘container gardens’

Container Gardening

Thursday, April 3rd, 2008

Container gardening is a great option for people working with little available garden space. Your big gardening plans do not have to be abandoned. With some soil, your favorite flowers or other plants, and a selection of containers, you can make yourself a very nice garden.

Container gardening is more than just a hobby for brightening up tight spaces. Gardening with containers allows you much more flexibility than traditional gardening. You can put your containers anywhere you wish. Of course people living in apartments like container gardens because they are often their only option.

Using containers for your plants allows you great flexibility in your flower choices. Plants that are picky about the soil they will live in can be catered to on a small scale instead of amending an entire area of ground. If you feel like putting a cactus next to plants that prefer a different kind of soil, it is no problem at all.

I’ve used just about any container you can think of for container gardening. My only limits are drainage and making sure that nothing dangerous was held within the container previously. You can often pick up containers for your garden at moving sales for almost nothing because people would rather buy them new than transport them.

Container Gardening in Your Flower Garden

Thursday, February 14th, 2008

Container gardening is a great option for people working with little available garden space. Your big gardening plans do not have to be abandoned. With some soil, your favorite flowers or other plants, and a selection of containers, you can make yourself a very nice garden.

Container gardening is a nice option for just about anywhere really. Even if you own fifty acres of land, a container garden can bright up dark corners or oddball little spots where there is no soil. Of course container gardening is also the only option available for some people who live in places like apartments where the only real estate they may have to work with is a balcony or window box.

The flexibility of container gardening is a real plus. You can place any types of plants together without worrying about their soil preferences. Of course light preferences are still important, but with so much flexibility, you can change your planting arrangements several times a day if you wish.

I’ve used just about any container you can think of for container gardening. My only limits are drainage and making sure that nothing dangerous was held within the container previously. You can often pick up containers for your garden at moving sales for almost nothing because people would rather buy them new than transport them.