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Potting plants.
Hello all.
Am very new to this gardening lark and am seeking advice on potting plants. I have recently acquired two lovely Bay trees that are doing very well much to my surprise. I have decided to take it up a notch and am a little bemused. I have 3 lovely copper hanging pots approx 9inches wide x 9.5 deep and can't decide what would be best to put in them?? I would like something that lives all year round (not necessarily flowering) but they will have to cope with extreme weather I.e FULL sun in spring/summer and gale force winds any other time!! Also can the plants be planted directly into the copper or should the be kept in plastic?? Help please!! |
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Fruit Trees |
#3
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Potting plants.
On 3/28/12 3:59 PM, New2this wrote:
Hello all. Am very new to this gardening lark and am seeking advice on potting plants. I have recently acquired two lovely Bay trees that are doing very well much to my surprise. I have decided to take it up a notch and am a little bemused. I have 3 lovely copper hanging pots approx 9inches wide x 9.5 deep and can't decide what would be best to put in them?? I would like something that lives all year round (not necessarily flowering) but they will have to cope with extreme weather I.e FULL sun in spring/summer and gale force winds any other time!! Also can the plants be planted directly into the copper or should the be kept in plastic?? Help please!! The copper will very slowly disolve into the potting soil. Copper is toxic to most (all?) plants when taken up by roots. It is used as a fungicide (especially as copper sulfate) on fruit trees and other plants because it is deadly to fungus and does not harm most plants when applied to the foliage. However, it can kill desired plants if it is present in the soil. In the garden, it will leach below the level where roots can find it, thus avoiding damage to plants; but in a pot, it will gradually become more and more concentrated. Use some kind of flower pot inserted into the copper pots, either plastic, terra cotta, or clay. To prevent standing water from carrying copper back into the inserted flower pot, be sure the copper pot has a small hole in the bottom to prevent standing water. -- David E. Ross Climate: California Mediterranean, see http://www.rossde.com/garden/climate.html Gardening diary at http://www.rossde.com/garden/diary |
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