Container Vegetable Gardening For Beginners (2024)

Get started growing vegetables with a container vegetable garden. The beauty of such a garden is that it can be located almost anywhere, from a patio to a rooftop. Container gardening with vegetables allows you to skip most soil-borne diseases while you create the ideal growing environment in a pot. A container vegetable garden also puts the harvest within easy reach, keeping fresh flavours at hand. To give your container garden a strong start, skip the seeds and plant vigorous young vegetable plants from Bonnie Plants®.

Choose the Right Size Pot

The first step in growing vegetables in pots is choosing the right container size. The ideal size depends on the type of vegetable you are growing. With plants like bush beans or leaf lettuce, for example, you can get by with a relatively small (10-inch) pot, while an eggplant or bush-type tomato needs a larger (18-inch) pot. Follow these guidelines.

(Numbers in parentheses refer to the number of plants you want to end up with in the pot, whether you plant seeds or seedlings.)

Plant a 10-inch pot with:

leaf lettuce (1)

Swiss chard (1)

bush beans (1)

French (round) carrots (11 to 12)

turnips (4)

Plant a 14-inch pot with:

dwarf sweet corn (6 to 7)

cabbage (1)

collards (1)

carrots (9 to 10)

edamame (2)

peas (4)

leaf lettuce (3 to 4)

spinach (3 to 4)

arugula (3)

Plant an 18-inch (or larger) pot with:

pole beans on trellis (3 to 6, depending on trellis type)

broccoli (1)

cauliflower (1)

eggplant (1)

pepper (1)

determinate tomato and support (1)

any kind of green, leafy vegetables (varies; see plant tag or seed packet for spacing guidelines)

Plant a 24-inch (or larger) pot with:

indeterminate tomato and cage (1)

cucumber (1)

summer squash (1)

artichoke (1)

No matter what size pot you use for growing vegetables, it must have drainage holes to allow excess water to drain away. Otherwise, your plants will most likely drown from overwatering.

Use Premium Potting Soil

To grow a successful container vegetable garden, start with great soil—not soil from your yard, but what's known as a potting mix. These mixes, like Miracle-Gro® Potting Soil, contain the right blend of materials like coir, peat moss and/or compost to create an ideal growing environment for roots inside a pot. Potting mixes don't compact, but instead provide good drainage and air flow. Another great option is Miracle-Gro® Moisture Control Potting Mix, which helps protect plants against over- and under-watering.

Pick a Sunny Spot

Place your container vegetable garden in a spot that receives at least six hours of sun daily, wherever that may be (know that pots placed on pavement, though, tend to heat up and need extra water.) Growing vegetables in pots allows you to fudge the growing season by placing pots in an area with a micro-climate. For instance, lining pots along a south-facing wall in early spring warms soil quickly so you can plant sooner. In autumn, a south- or west-facing wall retains heat and can help extend the growing season as frost threatens.

Don't Forget to Water

Pots dry out much faster than in-ground gardens, which is why container gardening success hinges largely on watering. As vegetables grow and roots fill the soil, plants need more water to stay healthy and yield a harvest. You'll want to check soil daily, and water whenever the top inch becomes dry. Another option is to install a drip irrigation system (sold in simple-to-assemble kits online and at home improvement stores) that will do the watering work for you.

Feed Those Plants!

Vegetables like tomatoes and peppers are heavy feeders, and even less ravenous crops like lettuce and radishes need to eat. In fact, plant food works in tandem with great soil to provide your veggies with just the right amount and type of nutrition throughout the growing season. About a month after planting, begin feeding regularly with Miracle-Gro Water Soluble Tomato, Fruit and Vegetable Plant Food, following label directions. This is a super-convenient way to fertilize, since you can do it while you water the garden—big time-saver! Plus, when you use a combo of this plant food and Miracle-Gro® soil, you'll be rewarded with a bigger harvest (vs. unfed plants).

Container Vegetable Gardening For Beginners (2024)

FAQs

What is the easiest vegetable to grow in a container? ›

Lettuce. Lettuce is one of the easiest vegetables to grow in a container. It grows quickly and has shallow roots.

What is the easiest vegetable garden for beginners? ›

Beets, lettuce, kale, cucumbers, peas, radishes, cherry tomatoes and green beans are some of the easiest vegetables for beginners to grow. Summer and winter squash are also good choices for first-time gardeners.

How do you start a garden in pots for beginners? ›

Follow these 10 simple steps to make your very own paradise in a pot.
  1. Choose a container. There are many container options available, so choose one that fits your style. ...
  2. Prepare your container. ...
  3. Fill your container with soil. ...
  4. Add a good starter food. ...
  5. Pick your plants. ...
  6. Prepare your plants. ...
  7. Plant! ...
  8. Water.
Apr 1, 2019

What vegetables grow well together in containers? ›

Best Container Plant Companions
  • Beans, Carrots, and Squash. Jung Favorites: Top Crop Beans, Adelaide Hybrid Carrots, and Sunburst Hybrid Squash.
  • Eggplant and Beans. Jung Favorites: Epic Hybrid Eggplant and Provider Beans.
  • Tomatoes, Basil, and Onions. ...
  • Lettuce and Herbs. ...
  • Spinach, Chard, and Onions.
May 6, 2020

Which vegetables works most in pots? ›

Almost any fruit or vegetable plant can be grown in a container, provided your container is large enough. You can easily grow herbs, peppers, tomatoes, onions, summer squash, beans and eggplant in summer, as well as broccoli, cabbage, lettuce and greens in spring and fall.

What is the best potting mix for container vegetable gardening? ›

Soil substitutes consisting of mixtures of peat moss and sand or perlite or vermiculite, amended with lime and fertilizer, work very well. One good recipe includes 1 bushel each of vermiculite and peat moss, 1¼ cups of dolomitic lime, ½ cup 20% superphosphate and 1 cup 5-10-5 fertilizer.

What vegetables are easiest to grow for beginners? ›

  • Easiest vegetables to grow. ...
  • Leafy greens. ...
  • Root vegetables: Radishes, turnips and carrots. ...
  • Did you know? ...
  • Cucumbers. ...
  • Broccoli. ...
  • Peas/Snow Peas. ...
  • Strawberries. Everyone wants to grow their own strawberries, and nothing is more deliscious than one straight from your patio or backyard.

What vegetables are good for first time gardeners? ›

The following eight easy-to-grow edibles show just how simple growing and enjoying your own fruits and vegetables can be:
  • Bell Peppers. ...
  • Blackberries and Raspberries. ...
  • Cabbage. ...
  • Cucumbers. ...
  • Garlic. ...
  • Strawberries. ...
  • Tomatoes. ...
  • Zucchini and Squash.

What is the most common mistake made with container plants? ›

Mistake #1: Selecting the Wrong Gardening Container

That leaves your plant roots in wet soil because they can't absorb all the moisture, making them more susceptible to root rot. Conversely, the soil dries quickly in gardening containers that are too small. And that leads to you constantly having to water your plants.

What containers are best for container gardening? ›

Select An Adequate Container

Plastic or clay pots, buckets, baskets, and wooden boxes are suitable for most vegetables. Plastic tubs and garbage barrels provide space for roots of rank-growing vegetables, such as cucumbers and tomatoes.

What is the cheapest way to make a container garden? ›

6 Ways to Save Money on Container Gardening
  1. Growing in pots and baskets is a great way to add color to the landscape without digging holes or back-breaking weeding. ...
  2. Stretch the potting mix. ...
  3. Make your own potting mix. ...
  4. Double-duty perennials. ...
  5. Double-duty houseplants. ...
  6. Don't overpack the pots.

What 3 vegetables grow well together? ›

Companion Planting Chart
Type of VegetableFriends
CabbageBeets, celery, chard, lettuce, spinach, onions
CarrotsBeans, lettuce, onions, peas, peppers, tomatoes
CornClimbing beans, cucumber, marjoram, peas, pumpkins, squash, sunflowers, zucchini
OnionsCabbage, carrots, chard, lettuce, peppers, tomatoes
12 more rows

What can you not plant near tomatoes? ›

Here are some plants generally considered to be unfriendly in the tomato patch:
  • Corn. Both corn and tomatoes attract the same predatory worm, so when they are placed together, your crops can become a feast for undesirables.
  • Potato. Like corn, the potato shares a potential problem with tomatoes. ...
  • Rosemary. ...
  • Fennel. ...
  • Dill. ...
  • Carrot.

What vegetable takes the quickest to grow? ›

Radishes. One of the fastest-growing vegetable plants you can grow is radish. Some types are ready to eat in as little as 3 weeks from seeding. They are a cool-season vegetable, meaning they do best in spring or fall, before or after the heat of summer.

What vegetables don't need much space to grow? ›

If you select the right vegetables, you can garden successfully even in the smallest of spaces.
  • Sweetheart of the Patio Tomato. ...
  • BushSteak Tomato. ...
  • Sweet Golden Baby Belle Peppers. ...
  • Spacemaster Cucumber. ...
  • Carrots. ...
  • Tom Thumb Dwarf Peas. ...
  • Tom Thumb Lettuce. ...
  • Radishes.

What is the best food for container vegetables? ›

As I mentioned above, a monthly seaweed feed helps keep most container vegetables in good health. Fruiting vegetables will need a tomato feed weekly (alternating with the seaweed feed once a month). Fertilise throughout the growing season from spring until late summer. Some container plants should not be fed.

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