Phaedra
Garden Addicted
- Joined
- Jun 26, 2021
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- Location
- Schleiden, Germany USDA 8a
Spacing is one of the trickiest factors regarding gardening, in my opinion. You can also manipulate it for a maximized yield (for example, succession planting) or an optimized performance (for example, smaller sunflowers for arranging bouquets or even forest gardening).
The experiment started last year when I cleaned up the summer crops from one raised bed, but nothing got transplanted for a few weeks. A naked bed is never a good thing, so I just put the young plants propagated from cuttings on the bed's surface. For me, it's easier to water them than letting them sit on outdoor shelves - in summer; it's so easy for 9cm/11cm pots to dry out completely in a short time. My idea is, as long as the pots sit in a raised bed, there should be two-way protection or win-win for both the soil (in the raised bed, it won't dry out soon) underneath and the young plants (the roots have the chance to engage with the ground and micro-organism) above.
It was. When I finally removed those young plants in the autumn, their roots grew crazily into the soil. It was a much better scenario compared with many root-bound plants on the shelves.
Then spring came, and the soil was warm enough to transplant seedlings. After seedlings were checked in their positions, I had to use nets to protect the entire bed from hungry black birds' crazy digging (and slaughtering young seedlings). They usually stop digging only when the plants are big enough and bushy and no longer easy to access the soil.
So, how about we let those pots sit in the spare space in the bed? It's not succession planting, just a kind of air-bnb for the potted plants: less soil erosion and more chances (for potted plants) to access food and water from below.
If we think about how mints are usually planted - in pots, so their runners won't spread. Using the spare space in raised beds should be a practical method.
There is also much less landing space - blackbirds show no interest in digging a bed like this.
I love my greenhouse and outdoor shelves; however, it's even better to let the potted plants stay like this - they enjoy much more natural elements and grow better. When they leave the bed, there are also almost no weeds, and they are ready for planting immediately.
I will say it's a 'nursery' concept, just on a backyard scale.
The experiment started last year when I cleaned up the summer crops from one raised bed, but nothing got transplanted for a few weeks. A naked bed is never a good thing, so I just put the young plants propagated from cuttings on the bed's surface. For me, it's easier to water them than letting them sit on outdoor shelves - in summer; it's so easy for 9cm/11cm pots to dry out completely in a short time. My idea is, as long as the pots sit in a raised bed, there should be two-way protection or win-win for both the soil (in the raised bed, it won't dry out soon) underneath and the young plants (the roots have the chance to engage with the ground and micro-organism) above.
It was. When I finally removed those young plants in the autumn, their roots grew crazily into the soil. It was a much better scenario compared with many root-bound plants on the shelves.
Then spring came, and the soil was warm enough to transplant seedlings. After seedlings were checked in their positions, I had to use nets to protect the entire bed from hungry black birds' crazy digging (and slaughtering young seedlings). They usually stop digging only when the plants are big enough and bushy and no longer easy to access the soil.
So, how about we let those pots sit in the spare space in the bed? It's not succession planting, just a kind of air-bnb for the potted plants: less soil erosion and more chances (for potted plants) to access food and water from below.
If we think about how mints are usually planted - in pots, so their runners won't spread. Using the spare space in raised beds should be a practical method.
There is also much less landing space - blackbirds show no interest in digging a bed like this.
I love my greenhouse and outdoor shelves; however, it's even better to let the potted plants stay like this - they enjoy much more natural elements and grow better. When they leave the bed, there are also almost no weeds, and they are ready for planting immediately.
I will say it's a 'nursery' concept, just on a backyard scale.