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Indoor Container Vegetable Gardening Ideas By Susanne Gilbert If
you are an apartment dweller, look to your patio and balcony to provide the
perfect place to start your indoor container vegetable garden. Herbs can be
grown indoors easily as well. An added benefit to indoor container vegetable
gardening is you can do this all year round! You
may raise an eyebrow or two at this suggestion, but it can be done, within
limits. Certainly pumpkins, squash, and sweet corn are not going to be items
grown inside the average home. But, many leafy crops, root crops, tomatoes,
and other vegetables can be grown indoors during the cold months of the year.
You don’t need a large outdoor garden to enjoy growing fresh vegetables. Container gardening is great
because you can position your containers for the best light exposure and best
growing conditions. Although vegetable production will be limited by the
number and the size of your containers, indoor container gardening can be
very rewarding. So, let’s get started with a plan for your vegetable harvest
for this year! Here are a few vegetables to
consider for indoor growing: Cherry tomatoes, Hungarian sweet peppers,
‘Gypsy' peppers, Short vined cucumbers and squash, Endive, Radishes, Spinach,
Swiss Chard, Leaf Lettuce, Miniature cabbage, Eggplant, Chives, Green onions,
Bush beans and most any Herb. Planning your garden is one of
the most important parts of container vegetable gardening. You can have
hanging baskets, pots, and planters filled with various crops that will
perform fairly well if lighting, pollinating, watering, fertilizing, and
temperature requirements are met. Decide what pots you want to use, and then
choose your soil carefully. Soilless mixes like peat-lite are usually too
light for container vegetable gardening and will not support plant roots
effectively. However, indoor gardening soil
is different than regular garden soil, so inquire at your local nursery as to
the best soil for your container gardening. Preparing your garden soil for
planting is the most physically demanding part of vegetable gardening and may
also be the most important part. Next, you need to decide
whether you will be starting your vegetables from seed or from started
plants. If you are new to gardening, starting vegetables from seed may be too
huge an undertaking, instead purchase plants. Successful vegetable gardening
involves far more than just popping a few seeds into the ground and waiting
for a tomato to appear. Even if you start with a small existing plant, you
will have the joy of tending, nurturing, and stacking your growing
vegetables. Added to the pleasure of vegetable container gardening will be
the satisfaction derived from eating your vegetables fresh. Learning is a process,
vegetable gardening needs time. As in so many other pursuits, it is true in
the art of vegetable gardening: practice does make perfect. Indoor container
vegetable gardening might not be quite the same as growing the same plants
outdoors, but it can be fun to tend an indoor vegetable garden when the snows
are blowing and the winds are roaring outdoors! Your family and friends will
be delighted and surprised when your serve that salad with the green onions
and cherry tomatoes they discover that you harvested that day from your
indoor container vegetable garden! _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Copyright
by Susanne Gilbert Susanne Gilbert is a gardening enthusiast and green thumb advocate who enjoys helping others get started with easy gardening tips. To find out more about how to choose the right container, get her free report instantly by clicking here! http://www.myeasygardening.com |
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