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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.According to the Herb Society, John Innes No. 3 (or No. 2) is what you need:
http://www.herbsociet...s/activities/pots.htm
Chris
http://www.herbsociet...s/activities/pots.htm
Chris
Whatever compost you buy you'll need to ensure that it is regularly added to in term of nutrition. Either buy a bag of ready composted fertiliser from the garden centre and dig some into your containers every spring before you start planting, or the other alternatively is to use chicken manure pellets which can be bought in tubs from garden centres. At the end of the growing season I also dig in my kitchen waste such as potato peelings, banana skins, apple cores, etc. into the compost in the containers and let it all rot down over the winter to provide some humus. The tumbling tomatoes I've grown in pots fertilised this way have done really well because this helps to retain the moisture in the compost. . The better the quality of your container compost, the better vegetables you will grow.
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