Find container
fun with lettuce basket
By
Norman Winter
MSU
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
Despite
recent weather ups and downs -- by the time you read this,
the temperature may be 75 or 17 degrees -- be assured that
planting time is not too far away. Consider planting in
containers this season for a fun, new gardening
experience.
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Growing
fresh produce can be as simple and fun as
growing a basket of cabbage, cherry
tomatoes or this lettuce hanging
basket.
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Even though I am always touting flowers and such, you may
not be aware that in my younger days I was an
if-you-can't-eat-it-don't-grow-it kind of guy. I also had
the opportunity to work for a few years with the best
container gardener in the world, Dr. Sam Cotner, who later
became department head at Texas A & M.
He
taught me that growing fresh produce for the picking doesn't
always mean having an intensive garden, a square-foot
garden, or an acre or more. It can be as simple and fun as
growing a basket of cabbage or cherry tomatoes.
We have
used bushel baskets at my house for just about everything.
They give a Southern, country-style feeling. They are
available at farmer's markets for just a few cents in all
sizes and colors. I have a couple of baskets in my office
that resemble the tall bongo drums used in Ricky Ricardo's
band.
Bushel
baskets are among the best disposable containers for growing
all kinds of plants. They come with handles, naturally drain
well, and look good on the porch, patio or deck.
Try
growing two or three cabbages in a basket, and maybe even
place a small annual like alyssum in the pockets between the
plants. Peppers also work well in a basket and can be
inter-planted with leaf lettuce.
For
extra fun, try growing cherry tomatoes in a basket, and let
the vines cascade out over the edge like you would a lantana
or purple wave petunia.
My son
James still talks about the time we planted Irish potatoes
in a large basket. This might be just the way to get your
children started on their first gardening
project.
For a
really awesome basket that will be the envy of fellow
gardeners, try lettuce in a wire hanging basket. Line the
basket with moist sphagnum moss.
Fill
the basket with a light potting soil. Place leaf lettuce
transplants about 4 inches apart in holes throughout the
basket. Push the root ball through the moss into the moist
potting soil. Be sure to place several transplants in the
top of the basket, too!
Place
the basket where it will get almost full sun. As the lettuce
starts to grow, you will have an almost-perfectly round
basket that is as pretty as an ivy or fern and a whole lot
tastier.
You can
choose to alternate a green-leaf lettuce, like Black Seeded
Simpson, with a red-leaf lettuce, like Red Sails, in your
basket, or make a basket of each.
If you
have thought about growing herbs, but for some reason they
still seem slightly mystical or just unknown, then try some
in containers first.
You
could try some in a bushel basket where they would certainly
do well. On the other hand, they look picture perfect in one
of the Old World- or European-style containers.
Which
herbs should be your first? You should certainly consider
which might be most useful in your kitchen, such as basil,
rosemary, oregano or thyme. These four really look good in a
container and will give season-long enjoyment. The fragrance
of these herbs is an added bonus for the patio.
This is
only the surface of the fun that can be found growing
veggies and herbs in containers. The options are almost
endless. Just remember to provide a large enough container
for the roots, a good light potting soil, and enough sun,
water and fertilizer during the summer months.
If it
is freezing when you read this, don't despair -- warm
weather is on the way.
-30-
Released:
January 27, 2005
Contact: Norman
Winter,
(601) 857-2284
Editor's
Note: Ideal publication dates of Southern Gardening columns
are within one month of their release. Editors should
examine older columns carefully for any information that
could be time sensitive.
Publications
may download
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