Archive for December, 2010

We have had a very hot and dry summer. The yards in our neighborhood are drying up and turning brown. The flowers in the patio planter are in need of watering twice a day. We have decided that we need to do something different in the patio planter next year.

We built our new deck last summer. We did not have it completed until late summer early fall, so we did not plant anything in the patio planter that the carpenter installed along the railings or our deck. Last year I bought several mums in the fall and placed them, still in their containers inside the patio planter. They looked nice and after the frost I simply through the containers away. We put evergreen tips in the planters for the winter season and then removed them in the spring.

This spring I made the mistake of filling the patio planter with dirt and directly planting flowers into it. The plants looked great in the early part of the summer, but with the heat they are starting to look bad. I am also concerned that the dirt and the water are going to wear through the wood of the patio planter. My neighbor suggested measuring the planter and then buying a plastic liner that I can place inside of it. This will keep the wood safe and will allow me to exchange the plants for the different seasons with ease. I thought this would be a great idea. I measured the planter and then went to a nursery supply store and found a heavy duty plastic liner. The gardener at the nursery suggested that I place large rocks in the bottom of the container topped with an inch of gravel and then potting soil so that there would be plenty of drainage for the plants.
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While I was at the nursery I found several colors of garden mums. The gardener said that they would bloom until the frost came. When I arrived home I pulled the aging plants out and then I scooped all of the soil out of the patio planter. I placed the liner into the planter and then placed the individual pots that the mums came in into the wooden planter. This will be very easy to clear away once we have a frost. I think next year the plants will do much better being in the liner rather than directly in the wooden patio planter. I think the planter will stay looking nicer longer also.

Root Crops are grown for their edible roots

Carrots, Beets, Parsnip, Rutabaga, and Globe Onions

>> All the above can be grown in your Fall Garden

Begin an organic herb garden with 5 easy herbs, for cooking and your own medicine cabinet!

>> Read more about Herb Gardening

Upside down planters are an easy way to grow tomatoes, if properly watered well you will love a bumper crop. So should you grow tomatoes in upside down planters. Although you may have a regular garden, you’ll see that this groundbreaking growing system is an enjoyable method of getting a perfect crop of delicious, homegrown tomatoes. I not simply grow wonderful tomatoes, but peppers and cucumbers as well. Those are the only upside-down tomato planter I recommend to a buddy. Planting tomatoes in each planter proceeded to go fairly well. I have not made use of anything at all such as this before so the true evaluation will be to see how well my tomato vegetables perform.  Have you been thinking about trying out an Upside Down Planter? You’ve probably heard about how easy it is to grow your favorite vegetables from your neighbors or by watching TV.

>> Read more at Upside Down Planters