Growing Up-Vertical Gardening
Growing Up-Vertical Gardening
Garden Tower Review
https://www.backdoorsurvival.com/garden-tower-review/
(SNIP) ... At 43″ tall and 36 lbs without soil, the planter itself is great for urban preppers that are short on space and want a solution that can work with their lifestyle.
The Garden Tower is an indoor or outdoor planter that allows you to grow a lot of vegetables in a small space. With the Garden Tower, a mere four sq ft can be used to grow 50 plants year round.
The Tower also allows you to compost, so you waste less and provide valuable fertilizer and nutrition for your growing plants. Simply add compost materials to the center tube and occasionally add some water. ---CONTINUED---
Re: Growing Up-Vertical Gardening
Transform Your Landscape with Vertical Gardening – Grow More Food in Less Space
https://commonsensehome.com/landscape-vertical-gardening/
(SNIP) ... If you haven't tried vertical gardening, hopefully this post will win you over. Yes, growing up instead of out takes a little more work initially, but the end result is well worth it. I use trellises throughout my garden to make plants easier to care for, reduce disease and predation, and produce a larger crop in less space. In the flower garden, vertical elements add visual interest and focal points – and can be just plain gorgeous. ---CONTINUED---
Re: Growing Up-Vertical Gardening
10 Benefits of Vertical Gardening
https://survivaljack.com/2022/08/10-benefits-of-vertical-gardening/
Vertical gardening is the solution to growing more without cramming your current garden area with even more plants. It’s also the way to grow if you’re an urban homesteader.
Whether you opt to grow a trellis, use garden netting, a pot tower, or other garden structure, vertical gardening helps to increase your yield in a smaller amount of space, decrease the amount of time you spend gardening, and boost the health of your plants.
Plants trained to grow upward, such as pole beans, sweet potatoes, tomatoes, and trailing kinds of cucumber, squash, and melon are some of our favorites to grow vertically.
If you’re out of space, why not give it a try?[color=#BF0000] ---CONTINUED---[/color]