| Author | Content |
MN_brown Minneapolis, MN (Zone 4a)
May 12, 2009 03:46 PM Post #6539894
| I am a beginner gardener with a brown thumb seeking help designing the layout of my "flower bed"..
I have a raised plastic sand table (about 21/2 ft L, 2 1/2 ft W, 1 1/2 ft H) that I want to convert into a planter. I have deer, rabbits and squirrels in my garden and I thought this might deter at least the bunnies.
I plan to have this against the front wall of my house.
The plants I have are:
1 plant Lady Lavender, 8-10”
4 plants Aster Pot and Patio mix– Frilly flowers in a mix of colors; 8”
4 plants Cosmos Rose Bonbon:. 24-36”
20 plants Callendula
4 plants Helen’s flower (helenium) – Wider than it is tall. 15”.
4plants Morning glory vine
I also have a couple of Amaranth plants , Basil, sandia hot peppers and lettuce. Don't know if it would help to have any of them also in the mix
Here is a picture of the table I intend to use. Please note that I will only use one half of it - the red side only http://www.littletikes.com/toys/toys-detail.aspx?Product_ID=...
Thank You! |
Smokey_SC Piedmont, SC (Zone 7b)
May 12, 2009 07:27 PM Post #6540808
| Are you planning to leave the legs on it. I don't know if it would be strong enough with wet soil in it! You would also need drainage holes in the bottom. How deep is the top of the table? |
MN_brown Minneapolis, MN (Zone 4a)
May 13, 2009 05:09 PM Post #6544550
| I will leave the legs on. It is a sand table designed for 50 lb of sand. So I am hoping it will be able to carry the soil. The dimensions are 21" x 23" x 4 1/2" interior. |
Smokey_SC Piedmont, SC (Zone 7b)
May 13, 2009 07:02 PM Post #6544976
| You 'might' get two or three plants to live in it! It is 'very' shallow for plants. If it were me I wouldn't even try it. Sorry. |
MN_brown Minneapolis, MN (Zone 4a)
May 13, 2009 07:57 PM Post #6545166
| Thanks for the feedback. I guess I will find some other planter then. |
Smokey_SC Piedmont, SC (Zone 7b)
May 14, 2009 02:07 PM Post #6548230
| Good Luck, Smokey |
gcorrier Lenoir City, TN
May 16, 2009 02:25 PM Post #6556675
| 4.5 inches deep is shallow but I beieve some pots for plants are less than that. I would ask a nursery or two and see if they have some shallow root possibilities. Also consider maybe an herb garden. Check the steppables web site also as the low growers they sell are bound to have shallow roots. Just a thought. |
NatureLover1950 Vicksburg, MS (Zone 8a)
May 19, 2009 07:21 AM Post #6569078
| You could try sitting a light weight pot with flowers in it in the center, surround it with potting soil in the sand table, then plant low-growing ground cover around it. The ground cover will creep over the sides of the sand table and it could look very pretty.
|
gcorrier Lenoir City, TN
May 19, 2009 07:55 AM Post #6569170
| What about making a big gold fish bowl. Using water plants and a small fish tank pump and filter to keep the water clean. You would have to add a reinforcement under the table to help with weight but could be neat. |
MN_brown Minneapolis, MN (Zone 4a)
May 19, 2009 04:11 PM Post #6570983
| Unfortunately buying more plants is not an option for me. I went crazy at the plant sale and bought a ton of plants already.
I like the idea of putting a pot in the middle with some vines hanging around. Maybe I can put some of my herbs and flowers in the pot for variety.
For the vine, can I use the Morning glory? |
shebs45 Chicago, IL (Zone 5b)
May 20, 2009 04:27 PM Post #6575701
| My daughter used a plastic kid's swimming pool that wasn't very deep. It was one of those that look like a turtle, if you've ever seen those. Anyway she planted it with wildflower seeds, and it grew quite well. It looked really cute. I think your sand table would be OK to plant flowers in. |