Container
Landscaping
Make your
Garden or Landscape Portable
Container gardens can go far beyond the pot of patio tomatoes
or mums in terra cotta. Whether used singly or arranged in
groups, plants grown in decorative containers can be used as
landscaping on their own merits. Container landscaping is
ideal for the busy person who cannot take care of a typical
garden.
Containers made of terra cotta,
stone, glazed earthenware or painted woods can be used as focal
points or punctuation marks in a more formal garden. Dwarf
trees in large pots might be used as the main focus of a raised
bed, able to stand high against taller plantings like
wheatgrass and lilies.
For casual landscapes, container gardening is limited only by
imagination and drainage. About anything can be used as a pot,
but the larger the better. The larger the pot, the more
insulated plants and their roots are from baking in summer and
freezing in winter. Larger containers also may not need to be
watered as frequently.
Concrete urns, whiskey barrels and terra cotta pots are
traditional containers. Try using more imaginative
items-There are old baby buggies, wheelbarrows, sinks, chairs,
children’s red wagons and the front-end of a Volkswagen planted
up. People have used old shoes, old purses, even the old
kitchen sink. Almost anything that can hold dirt, can become a
plant container.
Fairly new on the market are containers made with fiberglass,
foams and plastic blends. These are very durable and
lightweight, especially when compared to terra cotta, which
tends to break from the freezing and thawing when left outdoors
in winter.
On the patio, groupings of plants can be changed, arranged and
rearranged with minimum effort, bringing to the forefront
plants at the height of their beauty and screening those that
are not. In the dooryard or entryway, pots of colorful plants
coordinated with the exterior of the house make an
easy-to-maintain miniature landscape. Window boxes are another
traditional aspect of container landscapes, bringing the
outdoors to view within the house.

Don't be afraid to experiment. Most garden centers mark their
plants way down in late summer and fall, making it even more
tempting to try various combinations for containers. A dwarf
Alberta spruce, boxwood or yew can be used as a centerpiece in
a pot with cold-tolerant perennials or annuals planted around
it for a fall/winter setting.
For even more seasonal options, consider planting a plastic pot
in the container. The plastic pot can start out holding a
slightly smaller container of mums. Replace faded mums with
another container, this one with pansies or a small evergreen
to extend the combo well into winter.
Good drainage is a requirement. If using an ornamental
container that does not have drainage holes, consider double
potting: Add an inch of bark or gravel at the base of the
decorative container; fill with partway with soil; then place a
smaller pot with drainage holes inside the fancy one; and add
more soil to lightly cover. Don't use regular soil from the
garden in containers. It may contain insects or disease that
will attack the container plants. Use a lightweight soil-less
mix that includes vermiculite and perlite, two natural
additives that aid drainage.
Adequate water and a regular program for fertilizing also are
important steps to beautiful container landscaping. Use a
water-soluble fertilizer according to label directions.
Fertilize and water even in fall and winter if the plants are
still green and the soil in the pot is not frozen.
Container gardening lets just about everyone indulge their
enthusiasm for growing plants. With a little imagination, a
moveable landscape will be a delight all year long.
|