Sow a Salad Garden in a Window Box!
Growing your own food does not have to take up a lot of space. Grow this simple little salad garden in a window box or small planter. You can place it on a patio, deck rail or apartment balcony.
Note: I am demonstrating this in early Spring while the weather is still quite cool. See additional note if you do this when the weather is warmer.
I used a self watering window box planter I bought at Wal-Mart but I have plants on my website for building some inexpensive ones also.
I have had mine 7 years and they are still holding up great.
For this container I chose French Breakfast Radish, Italian Scallions, and Black Seeded Simpson lettuce. A lettuce that is crisp and delicious.
Use a good quality potting mix and fill the window box container. I prefer organic or making my own DIY potting soil.
Using your finger or a small tool, like this Sharpie, create a drill, or small ditch in the soil. Not too deep, these are all seeds that don't like to be planted deep at all.
Create a drill for each seed type. One for the lettuce, one for the onions and one for the radishes.
Plant your seeds according to the directions on the package. I went a little heavier with the radishes as they were older seeds and I was not sure about the germination.
Using a seed press or flat bottomed item (like this votive) press the seeds firmly into the soil. You want good contact between the seeds and the soil.
Don't press too hard, firm but not compressing.
Create a label to place into your container. If you are only going to grow one container that may not be necessary but if you have more you will definitely want to mark what is in each one.
Gently water.
Place your window box or planter in a sunny spot. Don't worry if you get some chilly weather. These plants are cold weather hardy and will sprout as soon as it warms up even a little.
If you are planting something like this after it has gotten to be very warm weather keep it in the shade until the seeds germinate.
You can put it in a spot that gets morning sun once they do but not in a hot spot.
I post new tips, tricks and garden tours some come on over and join the fun!
Enjoyed the project?
Comments
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Nancy Dabrowski Schmidt on May 07, 2020
That’s nothing new.
You have thin out radishes and lettuce continues to grow as you harvest it
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SusieHmMkr on Jul 25, 2020
*Correction...2 large salads a day*
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Frequently asked questions
Have a question about this project?
Did you put all three in the same pot?
How many heads of lettuce do you need to be able to make 2 salads a day?