With supply chain issues and higher prices, my husband and I wanted to grow
more than one lonely tomato plant and a couple of leeks this year.
The first step was doing research through backyard gardeners who grow most,
if not all, of their own food. Why? Because they have a very good idea of
how many plants of x, y,z vegetable you should plant per person that
probably works a lot better than our current plan of “yeah, sure toss a
couple of those plants in the cart. We’ll figure out if it grows enough to
make more than one salad later.”
Self watering patio vegetable garden
BEFORE
This season we are focusing on tomatoes since they were sometimes hard to
find last year, are easy to grow, and I can water bath can them. Most site
recommend growing 5 plants per person for most high yield vegetable plants
like beans and tomatoes to feed one person for a year. That really isn’t our
goal and given our limited space we decided to plant an average of five
tomato plants since we want to grow some of the more expensive vegetables
from affordable seeds.
Now that we had an estimate of how many plants we want to add, it was time
to create a space plan for the garden expansion. Our home’s allowable space
is our 6 foot by 10 foot back yard patio. We live in a freestanding condo.
We can’t have anything in the middle of our lawns because the Homeowners
Association mows our grass which is one of the reasons we like living
here.
After some measuring and some math, our best option for growing a lot of
food in a small container garden is to add a border of square/rectangle
raised planters around the perimeter of the patio and plant them using
this exact square seed spacer template.
(Disclosure: I am including affiliate links for your convenience.)
We also bought
this exact round square foot gardening template to maximize the amount of peas, broccoli, bok choy, kohlrabi, and eggplant
we can plant in our original round self watering planters that were shuffled
into new places on the patio according to our garden space plan.
Self watering patio vegetable and herb garden AFTER
I made more self watering herb planters from
these galvanized steel buckets to fill the thrift shop plant stand I bough last summer. All of the pots and
plants in our container gardening are self watering because I sometimes forget
plants need water to grow in between rainstorms.
Gardening Tip: Monitoring a simple
rain gauge like this one
in your garden helps you know if you need to water your garden after a rain
storm. Any amount of rain less than two inches means your plant could use a
top up.
I can get things to grow on the second shelf of the plant stand if I push
the top shelf pots back a little and move the middle and bottom plants
forward a little. Basically making it into a small space tiered plant stand
that uses less patio real estate than a
tiered plant stand like this one. To conserve water, we placed the
planters so the drainage holes on the upper shelves drain into the pots on
the lower shelves for lazy budget herb garden watering.
I'm letting some of these plants bolt so they will reseed and grow as
volunteers next year. You can
read the How to make a self watering herb garden tutorial on my DIY
blog Condo Blues!
Originally I planned on building new self watering planters but after
crunching the numbers on the price of supplies using different plans and
supplies, it was cheaper to
buy these exact self watering planters that allow me to set them
up in any configuration I need.
(SINGING) Kohlrabi, broccoli, and peas to the left of me. Tomatoes to my
right. Stuck in the middle with you…
Later into our container garden building project, we had to replace a
leaking rain barrel. We chose
this exact rain barrel planter because it looks nice enough that we won’t get any complaints (it’s a big
planter with a drainage spigot – honest!) and gives us another planter for
container gardening.
We hope the oregano will eventually the back of the garden bed too.
I transplanted pot bound perennial herbs last year from the container
garden to the front yard instead of buying annual flowers. The golden
oregano is growing into the delicious ground cover/living mulch I hoped
it would. The marjoram and sweet fennel are also thriving where no plant
has successfully lived before after trimming an overgrown tree. Finally
have a pie pumpkin experiment growing in a corner next to the new rain
barrel.
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