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| New Shoots Get a helping hand with advice for novice gardeners... |
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| It's just two ways of measuring, that's all. They mean different things, of course. There is limited value in knowing how wide the top of a pot is. A pot which is 30cm across at the top could be 30 cm deep or 50cm. Volume or capacity is more useful if you use non-standard flower pots. I - sad as I am - measure the dimensions of all my containers and work out the volume if it is not marked on the pot itself. This helps me work out how many plants they are likely to support. |
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| It was even more confusing if you were a Victorian gardener as the clay pots didn't have sizes, only numbers. Hence the advice in books to take plant out of a number 32 pot and pot it up into a number 14 pot. ![]() Evidently the way the numbers worked was how many clay pots could be 'thrown' from a given weight of clay, ie same amount of clay made bigger number of smaller pots, or smaller number of bigger pots! Now that IS confusing!
__________________ My Majesty made for him a garden anew in order to present to him vegetables and all beautiful flowers.- Offerings of Thutmose III to Amon-Ra (1500 BCE) |
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| What's all the fuss about pot size anyway. If you plant something in the ground you can't get a bigger pot than that and it still grows? I would work on the theory, whats the smallest pot I can use for this size of plant to save on compost. If the pot fits, plant it. |
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