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#1
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What is the recommendation for plant pond plants?
I am going to use the "standard" plastic basket type planters, but somebody told me that I should line it with landscaping fabric in order to keep the roots under control. Is this a good idea? For Lilies? For cattails? Other Plants? TIA Axo |
#2
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"Axolotl" wrote in message
30... What is the recommendation for plant pond plants? I am going to use the "standard" plastic basket type planters, but somebody told me that I should line it with landscaping fabric in order to keep the roots under control. Is this a good idea? For Lilies? For cattails? Other Plants? TIA Axo You will probably get a variety of opinions on this. I plant my hardy water lilies & anacharis in plastic dishpans or Sterlite containers. I used fine clay from my yard and put lots of pea gravel on top. So far it seems to work well, but I have small ponds, ranging fron 110 to about 200 gallons, no more than 2' deep. Rushes I have planted in a long flower pot (those pots used for window plantings, whatever they're called) and a Creeping Jenny is in an open-mesh pond pot. Those, also, are doing well, although the rushes appear to be growing out of their pot a bit. Gail San Antonio TX area |
#3
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There seems to be only one firm rule: If it works, it is OK.
We have ours in 1-2" rocks only. No dirt. Easy care and no roots exiting. Our containers, however, have no side holes, only bottom or none. Lillies, cattails, pickerel weed, etc. Works for us, cf. pondsite below. J -- ____________________________________________ Check out Jog-A-Thon fundraiser (clears $140+ per jogger) at: www.jogathon.net See our pond at: http://www.home.bellsouth.net/p/pwp-jameshurley "Axolotl" wrote in message 30... What is the recommendation for plant pond plants? I am going to use the "standard" plastic basket type planters, but somebody told me that I should line it with landscaping fabric in order to keep the roots under control. Is this a good idea? For Lilies? For cattails? Other Plants? TIA Axo |
#4
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As Jim said: If it works, it is OK.
This is what has worked for me. I use baskets lined with weed blocking fabric (no pesticide treated stuff). I use these for lilies and some of my marginals. I find that the baskets allow for some circulation, because the sandy soil I use doesn't stink like what comes out of a closed pots. I use holeless closed pots for cattails as they have sharp runners and it has been suggested that those runners might go right thru a liner. I imagine they would if caught in a fold especially. Many of my plants though are just held in the baskets without lining with big rocks to keep them upstraight. ~ jan On Wed, 20 Aug 2003 17:34:51 GMT, Axolotl wrote: What is the recommendation for plant pond plants? I am going to use the "standard" plastic basket type planters, but somebody told me that I should line it with landscaping fabric in order to keep the roots under control. Is this a good idea? For Lilies? For cattails? Other Plants? TIA Axo See my ponds and filter design: http://users.owt.com/jjspond/ ~Keep 'em Wet!~ Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
#5
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~ jan JJsPond.us wrote:
This is what has worked for me. I use baskets lined with weed blocking fabric (no pesticide treated stuff). I use these for lilies and some of my marginals. I find that the baskets allow for some circulation, because the sandy soil I use doesn't stink like what comes out of a closed pots. I use holeless closed pots for cattails as they have sharp runners and it has been suggested that those runners might go right thru a liner. I imagine I can confirm that cattail roots will penetrate a liner. My pond was dug 20 years or so ago and is lined with a polyester-reinforced synthetic rubber material from BF Goodrich. It was typically sold by the acre for lining retention ponds, etc. and is pretty tough stuff. Several years ago my wife had thrown a cattail head or two into it. There was a pretty good stand of them when I decided to have a water garden instead of a liquid compost pile. I had to patch 2 or 3 holes where the cattail roots had gone through, On the original topic, I have trouble understanding why one should use closed pots. Seems like you would need the circulation to get nutrients to the plant. Anyway I don't use closed pots and most of my plants are doing fine. Roger Grady To reply by email, remove "qlfit." from address |
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