Container Gardening Bridgewater NJ

If you’re an apartment dweller or have limited yard space, there’s still a way to flex your green thumb: container gardening. Cherry tomatoes draped from hanging baskets, herbs, morning glories and vegetables can thrive in flower pots. And even if you do have space for a garden, “there's always the possibility of adding a few more pots,” says Stori Snyder, assistant director of the Hilltop Garden and Nature Center at Indiana University Bloomington.

betterway lawncare
(908) 956-2523
P.O. Box 125
Berkeley Heights, NJ
Schundler Company, The
(732) 287-2244
150 Whitman Avenue
Edison, NJ
Full service aquatics
(908) 277-6000
PO Box 79
Summit, NJ
A Frog's Dream Aquatic Center
(908) 876-9467
35 East Mill Road
Long Valley, NJ
G Ryback Custom Landscape & Design
(908) 526-1298
165 Chestnut St
Bridgewater, NJ
BLS Landscaping
(732) 249-9709
214 Rosa Parks Way
Highland Park, NJ
Green Path Organic Landcare
(973) 301-0551
1 Dale Drive
Chatham, NJ
Grandview Landscape and Masonry
(973) 601-1114
24 Armstrong Rd.
Morristown, NJ
Demeter Designs LLC
(973) 981-8449
Longview Avenue
Randolph, NJ
Storr Tractor Co
(908) 722-9830
3191 Us Highway 22
Branchburg, NJ
Data Provided by:
  
provided by: Organic Food and Green Living

Finding Room for an Organic Garden

If you’re an apartment dweller or have limited yard space, there’s still a way to flex your green thumb: container gardening. Cherry tomatoes draped from hanging baskets, herbs, morning glories and vegetables can thrive in flower pots. And even if you do have space for a garden, “there's always the possibility of adding a few more pots,” says Stori Snyder, assistant director of the Hilltop Garden and Nature Center at Indiana University Bloomington. She offers the following tips:

Preparing the Containers

Containers need holes at the bottom for drainage and some rocks for the plant roots to wrap around. The roots “don't want to have ‘wet feet,’ so to speak,” she says. Containers should be at least one size larger than the purchased pot size.

Feeding the Soil

More plants can be grown in a small space if the soil has been enriched with manure, compost or humus. You can buy a kit to test the composition of your soil to see if it needs more nitrogen, phosphorus or potassium, which are important nutrients for plants. It’s practically “a given,” Snyder says, that soil will need compost or manure after subsequent plantings because plants always remove nitrogen from dirt. One way to improve the soil is to add a scoop of compost in a hole when burying a plant. Feed the plants again at least once during the summer with a sprinkling of compost or compost tea, where a compost powder is mixed with water.

Buying Local

Consider planting native varieties because they handl...

Click here to read the rest of "No Room for an Organic Garden?"