Expert Tips for a Sustainable Container Garden (2024)

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With container gardening, it's surprisingly easy to slip into unsustainable practices—here's how to keep it green.

By

Elizabeth Waddington

Expert Tips for a Sustainable Container Garden (1)

Writer, Permaculture Designer, Sustainability Consultant

  • University of St Andrews (MA)

Elizabeth has worked since 2010 as a freelance writer and consultant covering gardening, permaculture, and sustainable living. She has also written a number of books and e-books on gardens and gardening.

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Published June 22, 2023 01:24PM EDT

Container gardening is ever-popular with city dwellers and those who do not have much space for in-ground growing. It is also popular with those starting out and growing their own food for the first time.

But even those who have a garden can still have containers to make the most of all their growing space.

However, some may ask themselves: Is container gardening really the most sustainable choice? Unfortunately, it can often be less eco-friendly and sustainable than we might wish.

These tips and ideas for a container garden should help you make the most ethical and eco-friendly choices for today and for the future in your garden.

Must-Haves for a Sustainable Container Garden

To grow your own food and flowers successfully at home in containers, you will need more than just the containers, something to fill them, and your plants or seeds.

For a container garden to be sustainable—literally able to endure and persist over time—we need to think about what is required to sustain any garden over the longer term.

Sustainable Water

The first thing we need to think about is where the water we use to water or irrigate our container garden will come from. Remember, container-grown plants will typically need to be watered more frequently than those growing in the ground.

The first must-have for a sustainable container garden, therefore, is a sustainable water supply. This usually means looking at how we can catch and store rainwater on our properties.

Typically, this involves making sure guttering is attached to downspouts on our homes, and directing rainwater to barrels or tanks.

Set Up a Rain Barrel System: Easy Step-by-Step Instructions

Water might be manually taken from these sources to water a container garden, or, in some cases, directly irrigated from them. Rainwater might also be fed into an aquaponics growing system. But however it is directed, collecting rainwater on our properties is typically essential for all kinds of container gardeners.

Fertilization

Another important consideration is how we ensure fertility in our garden moving forwards. Central to that is a good composting system. Having one in place will make things a lot easier in this regard.

There are also other systems you might establish in order to obtain important materials for your container plants—such as a bokashi system, leaf mold creation, and creating your own liquid plant feeds, to give a few examples. But some form of compost is an absolute must.

Learn More About Fertilizers

  • Organic Liquid Fertilizers I Make For My Plants
  • DIY Organic Fertilizers Sourced From Your Home and Garden
  • Bokashi Composting: Step-by-Step Guide
  • How I Make Leaf Mold for My Garden

When possible, it's best to be making fertilizers yourself with inputs from your home or garden, rather than buying commercial products. As in many other areas, striving for closed-loop systems in the garden is the greenest way to go.

Sustainable Container Ideas

Expert Tips for a Sustainable Container Garden (2)

When you have sustainability in mind, the true cost of items and materials you use is one more in a long list of factors to consider when choosing containers for a container garden.

Plastic is commonly used in many containers. But as Treehugger readers no doubt are already aware, this is a material that comes at a cost to people and our planet. Derived from fossil fuels—with a high carbon footprint, and creating a waste problem at the end of its useful life—purchasing new plastic is best avoided where possible.

Fortunately, there are more sustainable materials from which containers can be made—such as stoneware, clay, terracotta, wood, etc.

Expert Tips for a Sustainable Container Garden (3)

And we can also reuse and upcycle materials and items from our homes to grow our plants. Consider empty food containers, pots, pans, sinks, tubs, toilets, washing machine drums, old clothing, single boots, or shoes. The possibilities are nearly endless.

How to Choose Containers for a Container Garden

Quirky, sustainable container options are everywhere. Of course, making use of items as containers that would otherwise be thrown away also helps to combat our waste problem and keep those things in use for longer. Additionally, it saves the money we would have spent on buying containers for our gardens.

Sustainably Filling Containers

When it comes to filling containers, a major mistake from a sustainability standpoint is to fill them with a growing medium that contains peat. Peat comes from peat bogs—vital carbon sinks and biodiversity hotspots. Rather than digging it up for horticulture, we should be leaving it in the ground.

Rather than using peat, we should all be using alternative potting mixes—either ones we can purchase (ideally organic ones) or those we make at home on our own where this is possible.

How I Make Potting Mixes For Seed-Starting and Containers

Your own homemade compost can be an important ingredient in potting mixes for a container garden. Taking a DIY approach is usually the most eco-friendly and sustainable choice.

For most vegetables I grow, I find this mix works well:

  • 1/3 loamy soil
  • 1/3 homemade compost
  • 1/3 leaf mold

With these tips and ideas, you can create or expand your growing space without falling into traps that leave a lot to be desired.

How to Create a Container Garden: 6 Design Tips

Expert Tips for a Sustainable Container Garden (2024)

FAQs

What are the pros and cons of container gardening? ›

Containers:
  • Pros: Easy to move around. Easy to transplant out of into another container. ...
  • Cons: Less space for root growth, which can be a limiting factor. ...
  • Pros: Root space is not a limiting factor. ...
  • Cons: Harder to sanitize rooms since raised beds are usually permanent (some designs have them on rollers or pallets)
Mar 16, 2018

What is #1 container in gardening? ›

The actual number refers to the approximate size of the container and how much soil it holds. For example, a number-one (#1) container holds approximately one gallon of soil.

What is the best mix for container gardening? ›

2 parts compost. 2 parts peat moss. 1 part perlite or vermiculite.

What are the best vegetables to grow in containers? ›

Some of the more popular container crops are salad greens, peppers, eggplant, tomatoes, beans, chard, beets, radish, squash, and cucumbers. More challenging crops include melons, corn, potatoes, and sweet potatoes. The key is to experiment. Look for “bush” or “dwarf” varieties of the crops you want to grow.

How often should you water a container garden? ›

Pots absorb heat, which can stress plant roots, and the soil in them dries out much faster than soil in the ground. Container plants generally need to be watered daily. During really hot weather, you may need to even water twice a day, especially smaller containers.

How to organize a container garden? ›

To keep things lively as the plants grow, I simply move the containers—farther apart, up, down, to the front, to the rear—to create a display that is always evolving. The portability of plants in pots frees me from some of the constraints of traditional earthbound gardening.

What plants are best for a sustainable garden? ›

Plants like lupins, peas, and beans take nitrogen from the air, sucking it in and storing it in their roots which in turn, benefits the surrounding soil. It's a win-win, as they give you an impressive garden display. Growing native plants like dandelions, buttercups, and ox-eye daisies shouldn't be underestimated!

How do you grow a successful container garden? ›

Place containers where they will receive the amount of sun or shade the plants need. Most vegetables need at least 6-8 hours of direct sun daily. Other plants may want full or partial shade. Heavy containers may be placed on a furniture or plant dolly if the plants need to move with the seasons.

Which shape of container works the best for container gardening? ›

When container gardening, a square arrangement can make watering easier with fewer gaps between planters for water to fall through. A square pot also gives more volume for the same height, as well as more surface area for planting, than a round pot. This means there is more space to pack in potting soil and nutrients.

What is the best container for planting? ›

Certain pots are ideal for specific plants, for example:
  • Best for Cold Climates (Freeze/Thaw Cycles): Wood or fiberglass.
  • Best for Hot Climates: Wood, fabric, terracotta, or plastic.
  • Best for Tropical Plants: Ceramic.
  • Best for Hanging Baskets: Plastic.
  • Least Breakable: Metal, fabric, fiberglass, or plastic.
Sep 29, 2023

How to start a container garden for beginners? ›

10 Steps to Container Gardening
  1. Choose a container. There are many container options available, so choose one that fits your style. ...
  2. Prepare your container. ...
  3. Fill your container with soil. ...
  4. Add a good starter food. ...
  5. Pick your plants. ...
  6. Prepare your plants. ...
  7. Plant! ...
  8. Water.
Apr 1, 2019

How deep should soil be for container gardening? ›

12" to 18" for moderate depth vegetables: eggplant, peppers, beets, broccoli, carrots (short varieties), cauliflower, celery, chard, kale, peas. 18" to 24" for deep rooted vegetables: tomatoes, potatoes, zucchini, winter squashes, beans, corn, cucumbers.

How do you organize a container garden? ›

You can assemble the container in any way you see fit, but it's helpful to plant the biggest plant, the thriller, first so you don't have to make room for it later. Then add the fillers around the base of the thriller, followed by the spillers trailing over the edge of the pots.

Do container gardens need drainage holes? ›

The short answer, which you might not want to hear, is yes, pots without drainage holes can damage plants. However, there are a few things you can do to ensure the health of your plants.

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