Planting Container Gardens and Color Bowls
This
 year let’s start a new gardening project to renovate your landscape, 
patio, deck, or balcony with container gardens and color bowls. 
Container gardens and color bowls can be easily made by the gardener. 
The containers and bowls can be made of ceramic, clay, cedar, or wood, 
and come in a variety of sizes, colors, and shapes. Container gardens 
and color bowls are planted with a gardening theme or style such as: 
shade tolerant plants, sun tolerant plants, plants with bold colors, 
heat tolerant plants, drought tolerant plants, herb plants, vegetable 
plants, butterfly plants, hummingbird plants, just to name a few 
container garden themes; or you can have a combination gardening theme 
such as herbs and vegetables, butterfly and hummingbird plants. Before 
we start our gardening, project here are a few components to take into 
consideration such as location, container size, and soils to use.
Location(s): To
 start you need to decide the location or if you are planting more than 
one garden or bowl locations. Depending on how much sun or shade the 
location receives will determine what container garden theme or style to
 use. 
Container Size(s): After
 deciding the location of your container garden you need to choose a 
container size because the size of the container will determine what 
type of theme or
 style of garden to proceed with. For herbs and vegetables theme gardens
 choose a container 18 inches or larger and for color bowl theme gardens
 use a 12-inch bowl or larger. Your local nursery or garden center will have a wonderful selection of containers to choose from.
Soil: One secret to success with container 
gardening is the potting soil that you use. There are several potting 
soils on the market and choosing one is a matter of your gardening 
preferences. Some of the choices are inorganic verses organic, with 
moisture control or without moisture control, with timed-release 
fertilizer or without fertilizer. Some potting soils are especially 
formulated for the type of plants that you choose such as herbs and 
vegetables potting soil or soils that are formulated for annuals and 
perennials; these would make an excellent choice to use for your 
container garden. 
Fertilizer: Fertilizers are the vitamins or the 
essential elements that a plant needs. The soil, atmosphere, and water 
usually provide the plant with these essential nutrients; but there are 
times when the soil is generally nutrient deficient and in this case a 
fertilizer is essential. There are sixteen essential elements to plant 
nutrition. These elements are separated into two categories, 
macronutrients and micronutrients. The macronutrients are: oxygen [O], 
carbon [C], hydrogen [H], nitrogen [N], phosphorus [P], potassium [K], 
Calcium [Ca], magnesium [Mg], sulfur [S] and are required by the plant 
in large amounts. Oxygen, carbon and hydrogen are provided to the plant 
by the atmosphere and water. Nutrients required by the plant in small 
amounts are the micronutrients: iron [Fe], manganese [Mn], zinc [Zn], 
baron [B], copper [Cu], molybdenum [Mo], and chlorine [Cl]. These 
elements are the building blocks to plant nutrition. There
 are several fertilizers on the market and choosing one is a matter of 
your gardening preferences. Some of the choices are water soluble, 
granular, time-release, slow-release, organic, or inorganic. Choose a 
fertilizer that is formulated for the plants you have chosen. Most 
gardeners agree in using a combination of time-release fertilizer and a 
weekly or bi-weekly feeding of a water-soluble fertilizer of your 
choice. I highly recommend Osmocote 17-6-10 or Osmocote 18-6-12, which 
is a time release fertilizer that will last up to four months and the 
next time to feed my containers I put on the calendar.
Insecticide(s):
 When growing plants in containers, you may want to consider an IPM 
(Integrated Pest Management) approach method to control insects on your 
plants and using an IPM approach involves a two-step method approach, 
inspection of the plants, and what type of control method you are going 
to use. The first part would be scouting, observing, and inspecting your
 prized plants for insects or chew marks on the leaves. Constantly 
scouting and observing daily for any insect or worm that would start 
eating your prize plants, and when one is seen, you can simply dispose 
of the insect. However, sometimes these critters multiply overnight and 
when this happens it is advisable to spray with Safer Soap or 
Horticultural oil. Using Safer Soaps or Horticultural Oils on all your 
plants is an organic and an IPM approach to container gardening success. 
Watering:
 Of all the ingredients that have been mentioned for Container gardening
 success, water, is the most important to a successful Container 
gardening. The soil for your plants will need to be consistently moist 
at all times, but not soggy wet and the water source should be city 
water or treated water especially when growing herbs and vegetables in 
containers. This is one of the reasons of Salmonella outbreaks on 
produce; the herbs that were recalled received Salmonella during either 
the growing process or the production process. Due to all the current 
recalls of produce, more gardeners are starting to grow their own herbs 
and vegetables this year versus last year due to the recent outbreaks in
 store-bought produce. Just
 another reason to start growing your own herbs and vegetables, you 
supply the water, you supply the insecticide, and you know exactly what 
ingredients went into your herbs and vegetables. For states that are 
currently under water restrictions, you can water your food crops, 
personal food garden, or personal herb garden without penalty. Always 
wash all herbs and vegetables before eating or cooking, whether home 
grown or store-bought.
Designing the Container Garden: The retail garden centers markets some of the plants for container gardens as: spillers, thrillers, and fillers to give the gardening consumer an easier way to choose plants for their container gardens or color bowls. Spiller plants trail down the sides of the container and are
 consider a trailing or vine type of plant such as: English Ivy, Wave 
Petunia, and Sweet Potato Vine. The spillers will be planted along the 
edges or in the corners of your container. Thriller plants
 will be an upright plant or plants and will be taller than all the 
plants in your container garden which is placed in the center of your 
container. Thriller plants can be ornamental grasses, salvias, upright 
rosemary, snapdragons, and stock. Filler plants
 are just like the name describes and fill the middle of your container 
garden. These plants are upright in nature and will be shorter than your
 thriller plant. Filler plants could include the shorter salvias and 
snapdragons, dianthus, marigolds, zinnias just to name a few.
After
 choosing your spiller, thriller, and filler plants arrange the plants 
as how they’re going to be planted in the container or bowl. I do this 
on a flat surface and by doing so you get an idea of how the plants will
 look before they’re planted in the container.
Here are a few tips and questions the gardener needs to decide before starting their container garden or color bowl project.
·         Decide the location of the container or bowl, the location decides how much sunlight the plants will receive.
·      The sunlight will determine the type of plants you will use, sunny or shady plants.
·        Decide
 your container size. This will help determine how many plants to use 
and it is not a gardening crime to overfill your container.
·         The size of the container and the soil you choose will determine how frequently the container will need to be watered. 
 
All
 photographs and digital images are ©Cheryl Ann Meola 2014. All Rights 
Reserved. All photographs and digital images displayed in this article 
are for viewing purposes only and cannot be duplicated. ©Cheryl Ann 
Meola 2014.