Bathtime?
Posted: Fri Sep 19, 2008 4:07 pm
I have had precious little success with carrots sown directly in the ground on my allotment in previous years. Most get eaten by slugs.
Earlier this year though I converted a waist high plastic bucket into a giant plant pot, by drilling some drainage holes at the bottom and filling it with compost. Carrots grown there have, so far, been a 100% germination and slug proof success, although my first crop are still too small to eat (sown in Aug - Nantes).
One of my fellow plot holders uses hanging baskets to grow his lettuces, also to avoid slug damage.
I am now thinking about trying to get hold of an old bath to do a similar thing for my lettuces. The plug hole would mean drainage comes built (yay). It would save all that growing in pots and transplanting. Plus the shallow bath shape/size should be just the ticket for a decent qty of lettuce without costing the earth in compost to be changed annually.
Is anyone else already doing this on an allotment out in forumland? Did you get any objections re possible eyesore factor from council guy or fellow plotholders??
It could of course be painted green/brown to blend it in.
Earlier this year though I converted a waist high plastic bucket into a giant plant pot, by drilling some drainage holes at the bottom and filling it with compost. Carrots grown there have, so far, been a 100% germination and slug proof success, although my first crop are still too small to eat (sown in Aug - Nantes).
One of my fellow plot holders uses hanging baskets to grow his lettuces, also to avoid slug damage.
I am now thinking about trying to get hold of an old bath to do a similar thing for my lettuces. The plug hole would mean drainage comes built (yay). It would save all that growing in pots and transplanting. Plus the shallow bath shape/size should be just the ticket for a decent qty of lettuce without costing the earth in compost to be changed annually.
Is anyone else already doing this on an allotment out in forumland? Did you get any objections re possible eyesore factor from council guy or fellow plotholders??
It could of course be painted green/brown to blend it in.