Growing salad...

Page may contain affiliate links. Please see terms for details.
I have a planter which is full of spring bulbs. It's now looking deserted, as all of them have finished flowering.
Could I plant salad leaves in the planter, or would their roots interfere with the bulbs?
I don't want to have to dig up the bulbs.

Any other ideas also welcome :smile:
 

ASC1951

Guru
Location
Yorkshire
Salad leaves have shallow roots, so they wouldn't interfere. But - planters often get hot and dry, which makes most salad crops bolt. I'm with Uncle Mort, plant the seeds somewhere else.
 

rich p

ridiculous old lush
Location
Brighton
Personally I'd dig up the bulbs and store them in compost till the autumn. What's the point of a planter with feck all in it all summer?

I grow lettuce in old wooden wine crates and they do fine as long as you water.
 

RedRider

Pulling through
Short of digging up the bulbs if you're limited for space I'd chuck some seeds in anyway, there's always a few hundred more than you need in a packet. If the conditions aren't right your salad won't do well but what have you got to lose?
 
OP
OP
SavageHoutkop

SavageHoutkop

Veteran
Personally I'd dig up the bulbs and store them in compost till the autumn. What's the point of a planter with feck all in it all summer?

Yeah, I didn't think about that when I planted them, but they really did look good when spring started :biggrin:

I don't want to have to dig things up the whole time, not my idea of gardening (yet). And whatever I put in will either need to die or be eaten by the time it's bulb-planting again...
 
With any pot based plants (window box, planter, hanging basket) the thing to do is to have a few for the same spot and then rotate them.

So first one for spring bulbs (daffs tulips etc) Second for summer plants (annuals of any kind) and then perhaps a box tree or something for the the winter.

The spring and winter ones can be put in a shaded spot over summer so they dont dry out too much or need watering much.

You can do a similar thing in one container by digging out and re-planting but it makes a bit more work.
 
Top Bottom