What Size Smart Pot Should I Use?
One
of the most common questions we are asked is “What size
Smart Pot should I use” to grow my tomatoes, or azaleas,
sunflowers or basil? There are a number of factors to
consider.
With container gardening, you can grow any
plant in any size container. But that does not mean
you should. Having one parsley plant in a 100-gallon
pot, or growing watermelons in a 1-gallon container,
are obviously not optimal uses of the Smart Pot.
Please consider the following when
trying to decide what size Smart Pot to use:
|
 |
1. Portability – If you are going to move the Smart Pot
around, get a size you can handle. A 10-gallon pot, for
example, might weigh forty or fifty pounds or more,
depending on the soil mix and water content. Can you move
this weight without hurting your back?
2. Do you need
the Smart Pot to fit? The Smart Pot has straight sides and
no taper. If you are placing the Smart Pot inside another
pot, make sure the bottom diameter will fit, and you can
lift it out.
3. What is the genetic potential of the
plant? A single Impatiens would not fill up a one-gallon
Smart Pot. For this type of plant, put a lot of them in our
smallest containers. A Burr Oak, on the other hand, is
genetically capable of outgrowing even the largest
container. Put one in a small container, and plan on moving
it as it grows. A giant Pumpkin will fill a large Smart Pot
in one season. Do not put it in a one-gallon container and
expect stellar growth.
4. Do you want the plant to
reach its’ genetic potential? Do you want the plant to stunt
in growth? Leaving a plant that could grow very large in too
small a Smart Pot for too long will cause the plant to
bonsai.
5. What type of mix will you use?
6. What type of fertilizers will you use?
7.
What type of watering system do you have?
8. What
type of lighting system, if any, do you use?
The
answers for questions 5 through 8 are all related. A
sophisticated hydroponic grower, using the right mix with an
ebb and flow watering system, with specialized fertilizers
and lighting, will grow a larger plant in a smaller
container than will a backyard duffer who rarely fertilizes
or irrigates. |
|
9. If you currently container grow, we
recommend starting with the same gallon size container you
ordinarily use. With proper care, the Smart Pot grown plant
should grow a little bigger and fuller when compared to the
same plant grown in a hard plastic pot.
|
10. If you
are using the Smart Pot to container grow a plant species
that you have not previously container grown – and we hope
you will container grow something unusual – start by using a
size that will give the plant’s root structure room to
develop. Then observe the growth of the plant and take
notes. Next time you may want a slightly smaller or larger
Smart Pot.
11. Try something fun! The Smart Pot
fabric aeration container will allow you to container grow
plants that are not usually grown in containers. Container
grow something that you can not find at the grocery store! |
Return to
Smart Pots Main Page
Growing
Potatoes in Smart Pots
Why Smart Pots
Are Better
Frequently Asked
Questions
|