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Old 12-09-2007, 02:54 PM posted to rec.gardens
Jim Kingdon Jim Kingdon is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Jun 2007
Posts: 167
Default Best Indoor Garden Options?

I'm interested in eating healthy and on the "cheap" as well, so I
thought that I would try to grow my own lettuce and herbs indoors.


I'd start with some herbs, because you don't need a large number of
plants. For example, basil does well indoors *IF* you have a sunny
window (summer only; it won't deal with low-light conditions like
winter). Rosemary, oregano, thyme - been a while since I've done this
indoors but I think those all were fairly low-trouble.

In fact, sun is the biggest challenge. Look for a sunny window (south
facing is sunniest, others things being equal) and get whatever
tables/shelves/etc you need to have the plants right next to it. Few
if any food crops will take the kind of low-light conditions that many
houseplants can cope with. If you have a balcony or window box
(outside), by all means use it, but if not just work with what you have.

Cherry tomatoes need less sun than full-size tomatoes - I've grown
those quite successfully indoors (5 gallon pot per tomato plant, and a
tomato cage). I've grown lettuce, beets, carrots, turnips, I'm
forgetting what-all. Lean towards plants where you eat the leaves,
roots, etc. Plants that need to produce fruit will (on average) need
more sun.

As for the aerogarden, I don't have any experience with that, but (a)
grow lights add to the cost (although they do extend the season into
the winter), (b) it is a small scale kind of thing compared with a
line of pots all along a set of bay windows, hanging pots, etc, and
(c) seems a bit on the expensive side (although perhaps mitigated by
things like the seeds coming in assortments sized for the indoor
garden rather than huge packets).

Likewise for hydroponics - not my area of expertise.

When I had a large indoor garden I just used soil in pots (commercial
potting soil, some compost although how to compost indoors is a whole
separate issue).

Some insect pests (e.g. aphids, whiteflies) can be a problem, since
you don't have temperature swings and insect predators to check them.
I ended up starting from seed rather than buying plants because of the
aphids (every time I got them, I'd face weeks of hand-picking with
tweezers, and perhaps insecticidal soap). The whiteflies would
probably be a non-issue if not using compost. On the plus side, it is
possible to avoid or eradicate lots of pests, and they usually don't
come back, having no place to come from.

As for books, there probably are some out there. But I'm aware of
more books for outdoor gardening (or indoor techniques I wasn't trying
like the equipment-heavy ones) - adapting things to indoors was
usually my own experimentation.

An internet search comes up with:

http://www.essortment.com/in/Gardeni...door/index.htm

I don't agree with all their advice, but they cover way more topics
than I could hope to in a usenet post.