For those who can't grow a garden in the ground, here are a bunch of unusual and thrifty containers to use for gardening.
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| last year's container garden |
Perhaps you recall that last year I grew our salad greens in containers on outdoor shelves. I used the bottom halves of gallon milk jugs for my containers. This worked pretty well, but I had wished my plants could have had deeper soil than the 4-inch milk jug pots provided.
This year I decided to buy some plastic bins/tubs to use for our salad green growing containers. I bought 6 of these 16-gallon bins at Fred Meyer, for $3.99 each less a 30% discount that week. So they were under $3 each. I was hesitant to drill holes in them (and make them useless as future airtight storage containers), so I delayed getting these started for a couple of weeks.
However, 10 days ago I finally got out the drill, filled them with soil, and planted 4 of the 6. I drilled 8 holes on the bottom of each and 4 holes on the lower sides of each for drainage. I used the soil from last year's milk jug containers boosted with a dose of granular fertilizer. This year's containers are about 7 inches deep, so they used considerably more soil than last year's.
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| 4 of my 6 bins filled and planted |
I had enough of last year's soil in the milk jug containers to fill 4 of the 6 of these large bins.
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| spinach and watercress on the outdoor shelf |
Our nights are still quite cool, so I have only put the two most cold-hardy containers (spinach and watercress seedlings) on the shelves on the deck and move the other two in and outdoors for daytime hours. I hope those will be ready to move outdoors in a week.
My hope is that because these containers hold more soil, they will allow greater root growth and will also hold moisture for the plants later in the season when things warm up. Also, because there will be fewer of these containers, I should be able to move them into partial shade off of the shelves for salad greens even on hot summer days.
I first got the idea to use storage containers from watching a YouTube video a couple of years ago of a family growing some vegetables in larger totes. They recommended those extra large totes that you might store items in in a garage or attic. Since I wanted mine to be a little portable (for moving later in the summer), I chose a smaller bin.

What I love about this idea is you can set up a temporary vegetable garden any place on your property that meets sun requirements. At the end of the season, you can clean that space up and us it for it's regular purpose. Or for renters, you can have a vegetable garden without disturbing the owner's landscaping. My husband and I had a container garden on the balcony of one apartment where we lived. In two other homes we rented, we got permission from the landlords to dig in the yard. The downside for us was that we had to then return the landscaping back to its original state when we moved out, which meant replacing lawn in both homes' yards. A tote garden would have been simpler for us.

For beginner gardeners, a tote garden allows a cheap entry into the world of vegetable gardens. One wouldn't need to have a dozen bins, but instead could begin with one or two. I find large bins and tubs at Value Village and Goodwill all season long. A large, albeit dirty, secondhand tub costs about $4 in my area at thrift stores.
The fill for a tote garden can be a mix of organic material from your yard and bagged soil. One video I watched suggested filling the bottom few inches of the tote with partially to fully decomposed homemade compost before adding commercial potting soil. One of my daughters used a large plastic pot to grow her own kale a couple of years ago. I suggested she dig into one of our compost heaps and fill the bottom half of the pot with our compost before topping off with bagged soil. Her plants did marvelously well.
Some folks get very creative up-cyling items that were destined for the garbage or recycle bin. These are a bunch of 2 liter bottles with bottoms cut off, hanging from a fence. Each bottle holds one plant. Very thrifty and very Econ-friendly.
5-gallon buckets can be repurposed as planters, also. Here's someone's bucket garden supported and corralled with a 2 X 4 frame.

The above buckets look like the size that we used to get dishwashing detergent in. I don't know if the owner of this garden painted used buckets or bought them already in a colorful state. In our house, we use containers similar to these (but white or blue) for our laundry "hampers". But I can see that you can grow decent-sized plants in this type of bucket.
Not handy with 2 X 4 building? Or you want something truly temporary? Here's a gardener's simple rack for their tote garden made with 4 X 4s and cement blocks.
I also wanted to share the following article from Farm and Dairy. It has a lot of good tips for successful container gardening, including information for size of containers needed to grow specific vegetables.
We had our first salad of the season the day I planted my seedlings into the 4 bins. I thinned as I planted, giving us enough baby greens for a large family salad.
I still have two more bins to plant later this week. My seedlings for those are just about ready for transplant. I'm keeping my fingers crossed that my family can harvest salad greens all summer long from my bin garden. I'll follow up with you later in the season to let you know how it's going and growing.