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#1
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Glass fibre pots weathering after a couple of years
The winds just blown over our olive tree in a terracota pot. I must say the
pot has broken up very easily. At the garden centre we have just seen some so called 'fibre-clay' pots, and they do quite a big square one which is what we need. It's fibra glass with a moulded patterned outside. They come in different colours which seems to be sprayed on to the outside. A paler similar colour to the top colour seems to lie underneath the top colour. Does anyone have experience of these pots and how do they 'weather' after a few years. If they resort back to a grey shiny finish (which is lot of fibre glass is that colour )they might look a bit awful after two or three years? |
#2
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Glass fibre pots weathering after a couple of years
On Mon, 5 Sep 2011 16:38:16 +0100, "john east"
wrote: The winds just blown over our olive tree in a terracota pot. I must say the pot has broken up very easily. At the garden centre we have just seen some so called 'fibre-clay' pots, and they do quite a big square one which is what we need. It's fibra glass with a moulded patterned outside. They come in different colours which seems to be sprayed on to the outside. A paler similar colour to the top colour seems to lie underneath the top colour. Does anyone have experience of these pots and how do they 'weather' after a few years. If they resort back to a grey shiny finish (which is lot of fibre glass is that colour )they might look a bit awful after two or three years? Repainting after some colour fade isn't a problem. I'd look at it another way. If the wind has blown something in a pot over then the something was too big for the weight of the pot or you were using the wrong compost (multipurpose instead of John Innes, for example). Simply choosing a different type of pot because terracota broke won't be a recipe for long term success - the plant will eventually get fed up with being blown over. You will need to either make the pot heavier (breeze blocks in the bottom of a sufficiently larger pot and/or a heavier compost) or plant the something in the ground. Incidentally, terracota can look great on the outside but it may have been weakened from the inside by frost last winter and so break easily. I don't regard any non-plastic pot as frostproof - if they're left in the garden after the early frosts they'll be covered in multiple layers of bubblewrap. Cheers Jake ============================================== Gardening at the dry end (east) of Swansea Bay in between reading anything by JRR Tolkien. www.rivendell.org.uk |
#3
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Glass fibre pots weathering after a couple of years
On Sep 5, 6:15*pm, Jake Nospam@invalid wrote:
On Mon, 5 Sep 2011 16:38:16 +0100, "john east" wrote: The winds just blown over our olive tree in a terracota pot. *I must say the pot has broken up very easily. At the garden centre we have just seen some so called 'fibre-clay' pots, and they do quite a big square one which is what we need. *It's fibra glass with a moulded patterned outside. They come in different colours which seems to be sprayed on to the outside. A paler similar colour to the top colour seems to lie underneath the top colour. Does anyone have experience of these pots and how do they 'weather' after a few years. *If they resort back to a grey shiny finish (which is lot of fibre glass is that colour )they might look a bit awful after two or three years? Repainting after some colour fade isn't a problem. I'd look at it another way. If the wind has blown something in a pot over then the something was too big for the weight of the pot or you were using the wrong compost (multipurpose instead of John Innes, for example). Simply choosing a different type of pot because terracota broke won't be a recipe for long term success - the plant will eventually get fed up with being blown over. You will need to either make the pot heavier (breeze blocks in the bottom of a sufficiently larger pot and/or a heavier compost) or plant the something in the ground. Incidentally, terracota can look great on the outside but it may have been weakened from the inside by frost last winter and so break easily. I don't regard any non-plastic pot as frostproof - if they're left in the garden after the early frosts they'll be covered in multiple layers of bubblewrap. Cheers Jake ============================================== Gardening at the dry end (east) of Swansea Bay in between reading anything by JRR Tolkien. www.rivendell.org.uk- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Why not make yourself a good square wooden planter? |
#4
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Glass fibre pots weathering after a couple of years
"Dave Hill" wrote in message ... On Sep 5, 6:15 pm, Jake Nospam@invalid wrote: On Mon, 5 Sep 2011 16:38:16 +0100, "john east" wrote: The winds just blown over our olive tree in a terracota pot. I must say the pot has broken up very easily. At the garden centre we have just seen some so called 'fibre-clay' pots, and they do quite a big square one which is what we need. It's fibra glass with a moulded patterned outside. They come in different colours which seems to be sprayed on to the outside. A paler similar colour to the top colour seems to lie underneath the top colour. Does anyone have experience of these pots and how do they 'weather' after a few years. If they resort back to a grey shiny finish (which is lot of fibre glass is that colour )they might look a bit awful after two or three years? Repainting after some colour fade isn't a problem. I'd look at it another way. If the wind has blown something in a pot over then the something was too big for the weight of the pot or you were using the wrong compost (multipurpose instead of John Innes, for example). Simply choosing a different type of pot because terracota broke won't be a recipe for long term success - the plant will eventually get fed up with being blown over. You will need to either make the pot heavier (breeze blocks in the bottom of a sufficiently larger pot and/or a heavier compost) or plant the something in the ground. Incidentally, terracota can look great on the outside but it may have been weakened from the inside by frost last winter and so break easily. I don't regard any non-plastic pot as frostproof - if they're left in the garden after the early frosts they'll be covered in multiple layers of bubblewrap. Cheers Jake --------------------------------------------------------------------- Why not make yourself a good square wooden planter? ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Dave I like that idea, i seem to remember some metal angle brackets specially to form simple angle joints on the inside of a wooden planter. If anyone has any further info on that I would be grateful. |
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