Planting Bags

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Posted by Bman on April 11, 2006, 10:35 am
 
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Hello Group!

This is my first post!

I'm new to gardening and have only had one season trying to get my lawn
to look
good again and a tobacco season, under my belt.

I've planted some tomatoes and sweetcorn and they have sprouted.

I'm planning on putting them into Planting Bags. But i've heard lots
about root
space and depth and how plants need to spread their feet.
Certainly tobacco
needs a good 30cm at least to root.

So i'm wondering if 5cm thick bags of soil are going to do the trick?
Or should
I take several of them, cut out the tops and bottoms and
stack them together,
making a kind of planter? If I had three of them
on top of each other, that
would provide a really deep bed of earth to
root into.

What do you think about my idea?

Bman


--
Bman


Posted by someone here on April 12, 2006, 4:19 am
 



For tomato plants I get a large bucket, empty half the growing bag into it.
Then plant.

Have good results each year I do it. Much better than using a regular bag.
Consider 'ring-culture'!
Bottomless bucket, sitting in a deep pan full of gravel.
Fill bucket with compost.
Fill tray with water.
Plant out.
The soil provides nutrients and stability.
The gravel and water provides a moist micro climate and a constant source of
water.
Roots grow down and out into the gravel.

Never managed to get decent sweetcorn so can't help ther.

Dave



Posted by Mel on April 12, 2006, 5:24 am
 



This year for my tomatoes I plan on putting 3 plastic plant pots with the
bottoms cut out, into a grow bag, and filling the pots with soil.  I hope
that'll give the plants more space for roots, and make it easier to water.




Posted by La Puce on April 12, 2006, 5:25 am
 


Bman wrote:

Sounds very tricky with sweet corns. I never grow less than 10 plants -
and like you I tried with grow bag and it wasn't successful at all as
the corns were heavy and didnt' get enough root space. They grew wobbly
and some fell and I had to prop them, attach them etc. and by late
August the whole thing looked more like a conceptual art installation
than a bed of sweet corns :o)  The idea to stack the bags for the sweet
corns is a good idea but how many sweet corn plants can you do in this
way? They need to get pollinated together - they need plenty of air
around them too. Last year I lost half my crop to the badgers - you
need to protect these well because all creetures just adore sweet corns!


Posted by Mike Lyle on April 12, 2006, 7:44 am
 

La Puce wrote:

It's not just a matter of stability. Sweet corn isn't suitable for
containers, in the ordinary way containers are used, as for reliable
results it's best grown in a block with plants 18" apart each way to
encourage wind-pollination. You could do it, but it sounds like a
hassle.

Moving on from sweet corn, I theorise that stacking growbags would
probably result in either a horrible mess of spilt compost, or the
bottom layer not receiving enough water. Instead, maybe each bag could
be cut in half, and each half stood on end and used as a rather wobbly
separate container. I don't know if that idea would work, so I'd invest
in some cheap black buckets instead. I used to grow my tomatoes in
square tubs made by halving those tough black 25-litre things dairy
hypochlorite comes in.

--
Mike.