Hoosierguy86
Registered:1375830122 Posts: 246
Posted 1393360881
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#1
Spring is coming and I need to start thinking/budgeting how to move from cups to planters. What do you all do and where do you get them? I was at Lowes and it looks like they are going for around 5 bucks. I can't imagine people are paying that when they have hundreds of varieties but maybe they are? Anyway I can't wait to read responses. Thanks in advance!
__________________ Scott N. Indiana 5b/6a
armando93223
Registered:1318984112 Posts: 1,164
Posted 1393361325
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#2
Try Craigslist. My brother visits local nurseries and they have tons of them for .20. They also give away the square, 1 gallons because the customers don't seem to buy the plants when they are in square pots. (Note: make sure you don't bring home spiders that are hiding in them). My brother when he is in a hurry uses a 2 liter Soda bottle and cuts them in half. I went to Home Depot and saw good prices on 5 gallon paint buckets, may buy them and burn some holes into them. Think it was 2.78. Ebay may have someone locally advertising pots...???
__________________ Armando in the Heart of California
Hoosierguy86
Registered:1375830122 Posts: 246
Posted 1393361519
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#3
Thanks, Armando! All of those are great options!
__________________ Scott N. Indiana 5b/6a
rafed
Registered:1252876934 Posts: 5,308
Posted 1393362016
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#4
Scott, Visit some nurseries near where you live and see if they can sell you some new ones. There's a nursery were I live and the owner sells me some by the sleeve ( 50ct. ). If memory serves me I think I paid around $0.65 each for a 4gl. Or you can visit some hydroponics. They sell almost every size you can imagine. But if you buy used ones please clean them first and do something as simple as washing them and let dry off and spray Tylex or Fantastic or something with bleach solution. And rinse off again. And don't forget to clean and disinfect your tools too. Good luck
rcantor
Registered:1309799312 Posts: 5,724
Posted 1393362486
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#5
Many of the nurseries near me give away their used pots. Some have to pay to get rid of them so they're happy to have you take lots. Landscaping companies also frequently give away their pots.
__________________ Zone 6, MO Wish list: Galicia Negra, De La Reina - Pons, Genovese Nero - Rafed's, Sbayi, Souadi, Acciano, Any Rimada, Sodus Sicilian, any Bass, Pons or Axier fig, any great tasting fig.
Hoosierguy86
Registered:1375830122 Posts: 246
Posted 1393362880
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#6
Thank you, Rafed! I have a couple local nurseries in the area. I never thought about cleaning out the planters so I will make sure to do that. I need to start cleaning my tools before and after especially after almost chopping my thumb off while removing an air layer on a mulberry tree. The cut was bad enough but then looking at how dirty the clippers were almost gave me a heart attack!
__________________ Scott N. Indiana 5b/6a
Hoosierguy86
Registered:1375830122 Posts: 246
Posted 1393363031
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#7
Thanks, Bob! Will hit them up too! So glad I asked before I bought all the expensive planters!
__________________ Scott N. Indiana 5b/6a
OttawanZ5
Registered:1192897779 Posts: 2,551
Posted 1393366324
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#8
Some dollar stores carry plant pots (1, 2 & sometimes 3 gallon) pots for an economical price (@ $1.25 to under $3). It provides easy access to pots when in winter the empty pots stored in the backyard are under 2 feet of snow.
__________________Ottawan-Z5a, Canada
Ekierk
Registered:1349141058 Posts: 165
Posted 1393370989
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#9
http://www.ebay.com/itm/GROW-BAGS-Black-and-White-Poly-Plastic-1-2-3-5-7-10-gallons-10-25-50-100-Count-/121070962341?pt=US_Hydroponics&var=420123740092&hash=item1c306446a5 I use these. 42 cents a bag plus shipping. These would be good for figs for 2-3 years. But at that time I plan on putting them inground. These would be perfect because they are white and reflect light back to plant
lelsa
Registered:1391237580 Posts: 11
Posted 1393382719
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#10
I eat a lot of pretzels so I always keep the giant plastic drum-like containers they come in as planters :) and like many others have said- ask around ... I have two decorative planters that I bought but every other one I have made from stuff that otherwise would've been thrown away or I got for free... Good luck! Lots of options!
recomer20
Registered:1378013757 Posts: 402
Posted 1393384870
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#11
In my area, a lot of the commercial landscapers (that do the plantings for entrances to high-end office spaces and stripmalls, etc.) will let you take anything left over once they've finished their installations each season. Usually they chunk whatever's been planted the last season, so you might even get some free plants out of the deal.
__________________ Rick C. Birmingham, AL z7b --- *INGROUND: S.C.Lemon ("Dr.Welch"), LSUpurple, Celeste (Std) *POTTED 3rd Yr: Alma, Atreano, BattGreen, GrnGreek, HardyChicago, ItalianBlack (Becnel), LSUGold?, MBvs, Sal's EL, Southern BT?, St.Jean, Jackie'sUnk *POTTED 2nd Yr: SunbirdUnkJP, BourjNoire, JHAdriatic, ValleNegra *ROOTING: RdB, ScottsBlk, BlkGreek-MN,Preto
bullet08
Registered:1284496248 Posts: 6,920
Posted 1393420546
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#12
chinese restaurants. they use food grade 5 gal bucket for soy sauce and tofu. they throw them away after using them. i'm sure most other restaurants have some sort of 5 gal buckets. when my father had his business, there were always 5 gal buckets from pickles and such.
__________________ Pete Durham, NC Zone 7b "don't talk to me about naval tradition. It's nothing but rum, sodomy and the lash." - sir winston churchill "the problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of other people's money." - the baroness thatcher ***** all my figs have FMV/FMD, in case you're wondering. ***** ***** and... i don't sell things. what little i have will be posted here in winter for first come first serve base to be shared. no, i'm not a socialist...*****
Hoosierguy86
Registered:1375830122 Posts: 246
Posted 1393421201
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#13
Ekierk- those bags are new to me. I may get a few to experiment with. My only hesitation is if they will tip. Thank you! Lelsa- Haha. You must love pretzels. I am the same way with juice and have started a stock pile! =) Rick- we do have some new developments in the area. Once the snow clears I'm sure they will be planting. Thanks! Pete- soy infused figs sound delicious! We have a ton of Chinese places in town. Another great idea!
__________________ Scott N. Indiana 5b/6a
buonnatale2u
Registered:1299090139 Posts: 184
Posted 1393424699
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#14
If you are looking for an online source this is a good place with the best prices if you need a good bunch of them. If you can go in with a friend or two and spend the. $200 you get 20% off, 15% off $150, or 10% off $100, plus free shipping over $75! I went in on an order with a fellow forum member from NJ and we made out a great deal on 1 and 3 gallon pots, some of the larger 4 and 5 gallon pots, stick labels, and yellow tag labels we split. It was a great deal buying in bulk. Really the best prices anywhere, trust me, we did A LOT of research, and they had the best pricing online and anywhere locally too. Too bad you are not in NJ, I would of went in on an order with you!
http://www.novoselenterprises.com/
A word of caution, if you do get used containers from nurseries, please bleach them first before using!
__________________ Christy 7a/6b NJ
bonechickchris on GW
Wish List: Italian Purple Beefera-where are you?? :)
St. Rita, anything Belleclare, anything of the Salerno region of Italy
Aaron4USA
Registered:1375832059 Posts: 2,969
Posted 1393433258
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#15
Scot, find a Landscape company and ask them straight forward if you could have their nursery pots for free. It works. I just did a random one and they will give me 300 one gallon pots for free and when the time comes to transplant those into bigger (3 Gallon) they will give me those too, they have no use for them after they planted the plants, usually they return it to the nursery just so they won't throw them away in plastic recycle bin. Keep trying different ones until you get a company that will give you for free.
HarveyC
Registered:1212433117 Posts: 3,294
Posted 1393433793
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#16
Aaron, I got about 200 5 gallon pots for free (delivered, no less) and go straight from the quart sized tree pots or 1 gallon pots into the 5 gallon pots and it works out very well. However, I only fill them deep enough to keep the soil at the same level as the tree had been growing. This works out to about a 3 gallon pot most of the time but gives me a lot of room for giving a good soaking when watering. I can water faster since I don't need to wait for the water to soak in before adding more, etc.
__________________Harvey - Correia Farms Isleton, CA (Sacramento County) USDA zone 9b, Sunset zone 14
http://www.figaholics.com https://www.facebook.com/Figaholics
Aaron4USA
Registered:1375832059 Posts: 2,969
Posted 1393435652
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#17
oh yeah Harvey I noticed you were using tree pots, they are tall, I was actually thinking about those since they might take less space too...Where do you get your soil to transplant? I don't know if I can afford Miracle-Grow high grade potting soil for 200+ cuttings then to transplant... I'm all worried about the expenses when it comes to fill up 200-300 5Gal pots, LOL I'm not even doing this for business.
HarveyC
Registered:1212433117 Posts: 3,294
Posted 1393437378
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#18
Aaron, I start cuttings in small treepots that are 3" square x 8" tall, recycled from some large winegrape vineyard plantings nearby (I have enough for many years). I then transplant them into the 4" square x 12" tall treepots that I bought from Stuewe. Up through this point, I'm using ProMix HP which I buy at Redi-Gro in Sacramento, a large plant that handles thousands of cubic yards of soil but also sells supplies like this. The 3.8 cubic foot compressed bale (60 pounds) costs about $31 and I'd guess I can maybe get close to 100 trees completed through the quart pot size from the one bale (I've used 1 bale to handle about 200 cuttings of which 16 are in quart pots now). Once I move into the larger pots, I use Jon's method. I went to a landfill 15 miles away and picked up a dump trailer of compost for free and am adding perlite and slow release fertilizer to it.
__________________Harvey - Correia Farms Isleton, CA (Sacramento County) USDA zone 9b, Sunset zone 14
http://www.figaholics.com https://www.facebook.com/Figaholics
RichinNJ
Registered:1374784282 Posts: 1,687
Posted 1393440046
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#19
Quote:
Originally Posted by HarveyC Aaron, I got about 200 5 gallon pots for free (delivered, no less) and go straight from the quart sized tree pots or 1 gallon pots into the 5 gallon pots and it works out very well. However, I only fill them deep enough to keep the soil at the same level as the tree had been growing. This works out to about a 3 gallon pot most of the time but gives me a lot of room for giving a good soaking when watering. I can water faster since I don't need to wait for the water to soak in before adding more, etc.
This is good information. I'm buying some pots to transplant some of my plants currently in quart containers in perlite this weekend and I was thinking I should jump right to 5 gallon pots. Im thinking of mulching them with HD bark of some sort and this will give me some additional room for it.
Aaron4USA
Registered:1375832059 Posts: 2,969
Posted 1393440866
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#20
ok Thanks Harvey, so I'll skip 3 gallon stem, since 3 and 5 have same width anyway. from 1Gallon i'll move them to 5Gallon and keep the soil level low like you said.