ChatterBank4 mins ago
um???
7 Answers
can i grow sweetcorn in a very deep pot?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by lay_reb. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --
Sure. Don't need more than about 8 inches of soil. You could build a raised bed out of boards and put it where it gets lots of sun. Mix some fertilizer with the soil (about 2 lbs. per 100sq. ft.) and plant seeds about a foot apart.
If you're talking about indoors, forget it, unless you've got a greenhouse.
If you're talking about indoors, forget it, unless you've got a greenhouse.
When I was a child there was a farmer who looked after my horse in the Autumn and Winter. I remember once asking him a similar question. I was enamoured with the beautiful cobs of sweetcorn his wife would serve at the Sunday dinner...and being a 'city boy' I wanted to bring some of the country home.
As he was planting rows of corn, (three kernels to a hole), I asked him if I could put some in a pot and take it home.
Mr. Fowler looked up to me, then looked around the field.
In a long drawn voice he said 'mehbee, son. But dem corns is the family type and dat means you gots to keep em to-gedder so dems can talk.
I took that to mean he thought field planting would thrive, but independent pots may not...
I never tested it.. You just brought back a sweet memory to me...
Good luck on your farming exercise!
Fr. Bill
As he was planting rows of corn, (three kernels to a hole), I asked him if I could put some in a pot and take it home.
Mr. Fowler looked up to me, then looked around the field.
In a long drawn voice he said 'mehbee, son. But dem corns is the family type and dat means you gots to keep em to-gedder so dems can talk.
I took that to mean he thought field planting would thrive, but independent pots may not...
I never tested it.. You just brought back a sweet memory to me...
Good luck on your farming exercise!
Fr. Bill
You can get them started in pots to transplant them later but personally I think growing them in pots would result in a poor crop. they really need to be planted in large blocks in an open sunny spot, this is important because they are polinated by the wind and I have the feeling there are other unknown factors for growing them this way.
If you try this next year, Good Luck. Tbird+
If you try this next year, Good Luck. Tbird+