A guide to growing edible produce in containers makes recommendations for a wide variety of fruits and vegetables in spite of space constraints, in an illustrated reference that provides step-by-step instructions for forty projects.
I'd actually give this a 3.5. I ran across this book a few summers ago and found myself enchanted. The photography and the simplicity lured me right in. I started thinking "I could grow corn in pot! Apple trees in a pot! Anything and everything in a pot!!!" It pretty much falls into the category of "things I probably won't ever do completely, but might be inspired to try one or two of these ideas." The problem of course, is that for many of the plants, to be able to successfully grow them in pots, you'd need to get your hands on a variety of specialty dwarf varieties. As such, all the potential crops in pots based on this book are not terribly realistic. Still, it's fun to think about, and there are some practical tips and options for the average home gardener.
This book was quite the whirlwind of basic planting information. Occasionally it would give oddly specific suggestions or say things that no other container gardening book has recommended before (not necessarily wrong things possibly but it raised a few flags). If you don't have full sun none of these ideas are for you. It also referenced having access to dirt-in-the-ground/outside yard space. The "finished product" photos were awesome but having been foiled by several bad years of container gardening anyone who can get their containers to look like the photos is probably capable of magic.
A container recipe book with beautiful photography. The Kindle version is a PDF, so good luck highlighting text. The recipes themselves are lovely to look at but otherwise limited.
First, the plants suggested are very specific with no alternatives given. Second, some of the suggestions mix poisonous with edible crops. Inedible crops are marked as (inedible), but little is done to highlight their health risks.
Gardeners raising pets and small children should tread with caution here. Make sure you read up widely on each variety listed.
If you are in Europe & new to container gardening, I can highly recommend Crops in Tight Spots by Alex Mitchell and Patio Produce by Paul Peacock.
This book contains 50 glorious DIY projects to help you grow edible crops in pots year round, made easy with plant lists, step-by-step instructions and at-a-glance symbols for growing requirements. Get potting, city dwellers!
mom passed this book onto me from older bro who is cleaning out his books. this is an extremely basic book, contained no information i didn't already know that would help me have more success in growing in pots. i didn't choose this book, and wasn't impressed with it at all. maybe 2 stars? seemed more focused on how to make *specific* plant arrangements in pots, and has 'ingredient' lists for each of the various pot arrangements.
Crops in Pots seems to be a reasonably solid gardening book for beginners. Purnell spent quite a bit of time focused on the appearance of the pots (making sure the "theme" of the pot matched the plant inside), but otherwise offered good information.
I learned about this book in my master gardener training - it was passed around as an example reference book during our container gardening class. It's not comprehensive, and if you don't know anything about growing in containers, this might not be the place to start. There are some "container gardening basics," but I wouldn't want all my container gardening knowledge to come from those five-ish pages. With that said, if you are going to take up container gardening edible plants (and I would, of course, encourage you to do that), this book is worth reading. A lot of container gardening books are only focused on ornamentals, and the edibles get left behind or just passing mention. In this book, however, each arrangement is focused on the edible plants, with ornamentals used as fillers or companions. There is a helpful section at the end of types and varieties of veggies well-suited to container growing. So you can find some variety of whatever you can dream up, and advice on how to execute it.
Some of the groupings are so predictable - varieties of edible flowers, pots of ornamental lettuces, and many varieties of herbs, match the red pepper with the red flower (yawn). Those are typical things to grow in containers. But there are some creative ideas in here, using edibles that flourish in pots and companions that suit them. Some of my favorite groups include a "summer cocktail" bucket with borage, salad burnet and alpine strawberries, "ornamental onions" (varieties of spring onions mixed with spinach) planted in an old wooden crate, and round yellow zucchini alongside small bushy red tomatoes. There are lots of creative uses for peas, beans, eggplant and kohlrabi. I also appreciated some of the more unusual pots - blueberries (vertical habit) paired with cranberries (horizontal habit), fruiting currants paired with dwarf Dianthus, zucchini and banana plant (who would have thought of that?), and dwarf cape gooseberry & passion fruit.
I am glad I checked this out from the library, but I wouldn't buy it. But you know, I have a policy about buying books, so...
Presented in the form of a recipe book for planting up containers and pots,
Introductory section on getting started which covers basics such as choosing containers and compost and how to plant up, as well as sowing, general carem propagation and pests and diseases.
Main section of book is a series of recipes for planting up different containers presented under the headings: starters (mostly salads and herbs), main course (main veg) and desserts (fruit).
Entertaining and well illustrated with lots of photos.
Found it interesting that other reviews ran the gamut from "this book was great" to "this book was not the least bit helpful". I, personally, thought the book adequately explained how the average person can grow edible plants in containers, and make them look great at the same time. Whether you simply want edible plants in your containers, or you'd like to combine flowers and other non-edible plants in with the edible ones, this book gives you some great tips on how to have a successful container garden.
This deals with more decorative ideas. It sort of gives a "recipe" for a pot with a combination of plants. For example, next to a picture it states you need a black planter. It doesn't state why you need a BLACK one. Is it for the style to match the picture or is it to retain heat that might be necessary for the plants? A few of the plants are a bit unusual and no information is given as to the hardiness of the plants or in what zones they do best.
This is just okay-- there is a new revised edition, maybe that is better. Having read it I think it should be renamed: "Pleasant-enough decorative container gardens composed of hard to find varieties of plants with some edible plants in them" I was just looking for a book that would explain which types of pots are best for various vegetables...I'll keep looking.
This is a great reference book for growing crops in containers and have it look great. Very inspiring and helpful that it lists actual varieties that are great for growing in pots (tom tom and tumbling tom tomatoes, fairy tale eggplant, etc).
I know it's a little late in the season for gardening, but the library finally came through with this one for me -- and it's gorgeous! I love the idea of combining flowers and food in a pot -- for beauty and tasty simple food.
This was a VERY disappointing read. I am on the hunt for the ultimate container gardening book and this is not it. I did gleam two ideas for next year from this book however - sugar snap peas and sweet peas in the same hanging basket.
A cute little book with some nice ideas for plantings. It's probably not the most resource-intensive book for container gardening -- I'm certain there's books out there that are better than that -- but it's nice for some inspiration.
This book is not designed for an experienced gardener. However, if you are just looking into the idea of growing some of your own food in a container garden, it might be a good basis for additional research.
Not what I was expecting. I was hoping for a plant-by-plant breakdown of growing food plants in containers. This is actually a rather artful set of growing arrangements using different food plants, but it's more about form than function.
This book was interesting in that it told you how best to accompany plants in the same container. Other than that, it wasn't focused on organic container gardening and was more focused on how to plant. An OK reference but not what I was looking for.
I like this book because it's simple to read, has awesome plant combinations and great graphics. If you need to grow in pots, this is a worthwhile read. For a more detailed review you can visit our website at homesteadlady dot com under "Book Reviews".
Living in Alaska, I need to know which plants will grow in our climate. No mention of it. A lot of choices are unusual plants that I would not easily find. Pretty pictures, inspiring combos for planters, but not much useful how-to's for me to apply.