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🌿 Grow Big or Go Home! 🌿
The 247Garden 5-Pack 25 Gallon Grow Bags are designed for optimal plant health and growth. Made from durable 300GSM non-woven fabric, these aeration pots promote healthy root development, reduce transplant shock, and are reusable for eco-conscious gardening. With a size of 16.5 inches in height and 21 inches in diameter, they are perfect for a variety of plants, ensuring your garden flourishes in any season.
S**E
I like these!
I'm learning container vegetable gardening and these were perfect for growing baby new potatoes.After harvest last year, I left them outside in the weather and was still able to reuse them again this year too.You must water a little more than you would a clay pot because the air flow but that's also great to make sure you don't get rotThese are a great solution if you can't plant directly in the ground
J**Y
Works Great!
Works great! Not super cheap flimsy fabric pots. They offer a variety of sizes to choose from and are sturdy.
S**R
I have been converted!
At first I wasn't sold on these, but we needed something to use outside for tomatoes, pumpkin, and watermelons, so I got these. Filling with good soil, these are fantastic! The plants are thriving, and with these being fabric, over-watering is much harder to do. These also work great for plans that like a well-drained soli, like the tomatoes.Even filled with dirt (two or three cubic feet), they are not so heave that they cannot be moved. They have held up well, and have proven to be a great addition to our garden.
G**L
interesting details
I'll start by saying I'm starting my 4th year using these fabric bags. Although I keep adding to my collection, the ones I started with are still in good shape in spite of being exposed to the elements year round. I live in S. Carolina, so this doesn't include snow, but does include direct sunlight, wind, and rain. These bags are strong and durable. I have both ornamentals and edibles growing in them. Each year I start with new bags for disease-prone annuals, things like tomatoes and cucumbers, but move other plants into the used bags. You won't find any kind of growing container that gives you more use per dollar spent.I'm in my 70's and confine my gardening to my deck. It's not the sunniest spot, but I still manage to produce enough tomatoes and cucumbers to keep my hubby and me happy. Yes... I do get get "moss" or Algae on the outsides of the bags, especially those in deeper shade, but I haven't found this a detriment to anything I've tried to grow so far, and personally think it adds to the natural look of the garden... like mossy rocks and trees along a stream. I should note that there's also stuff that appears on the plastic rail-pots in use and I have to clean them every Spring. I'm a lazy gardener, so haven't tried to wash or clean the bags.An interesting "perk" ... for me, at least... is that air-born seeds become attached to the sides of the bags and actually germinate, producing baby plants on the side of the bags. Some are weeds, of course, and easily removed, but I've left a few ferns and sorrel growing, producing a cascading effect similar to those "pocket" planters and "Strawberry jars". Visitors to my garden always comment with delight when they catch sight of these growing on the sides of the bags.For those of you concerned with moisture-retention: I've found that the smaller sizes dry out in our climate much faster than the larger ones. My personal preference is for the 10-gal size, especially for tomatoes and cucumbers. I've placed all my "bags" on rolling saucers, which makes them quite easy to move as I have to chase the sun around the deck as the season progresses.Four years ago, when I started my adventure with container-gardening, I turned to the grow-bags because it was the affordable way to get started. My thinking then was that I could add more permanent containers along the way. But after adding just a couple, I stopped wasting my money on anything else. I love the grow-bags, and find they actually support healthier, more productive plants. My entire garden is now thriving in these bags, except for the rail pots and hanging baskets. I'm waiting for the manufacturers to start producing fabric versions of those! I'm picturing something like a saddle bag supported by a wire frame to drape over the porch rail. LOL I've already fashioned a couple of my own basket liners from 10-gal bags, (to replace those coir liners than only last one season) but of course, a liner made specifically for that purpose would be nicer!
G**A
Excellent Results
I cannot say enough good things about these garden pots. I've used some by another manufacturer in the past and had mixed results. My mother and I wanted to grow potatoes this year but putting things in the ground is just too hard at our ages (58 and 84) so everything is in containers or raised beds.I used a mixture of miracle grow potting soil and some composted garden soil that we let sit over the winter. Probably about 50-50. I set each of the bags on four flat landscaping bricks because I thought that would make them sit more evenly. My mom planted her potatoes in 3 of the bags a few weeks after St. Patrick's Day. I planted 2 eggplant in the last 2 bags a few weeks after that. It was warm here in eastern Pennsylvania so I pushed the season.Both the potatoes and eggplant grew beautifully. We have already already harvested all of the potatoes and have replanted the pots with more potatoes to try for a 2nd season. So far, they are growing well. We have been harvesting large fist size eggplants at a rate of about 1 or 2 a week. We planted a variety grown particularly for containers.These bags dramatically increased the real estate of my garden. It took almost no preparation and, as it looks now, they will be in great shape for use next year. I do plan to empty them out come fall and keep them in the basement. I have attached a few photos.UPDATE: April 30, 2017My plans to empty out the bags and put them away for the winter went awry. I just never got to it. They all stayed outside. I turned them over about 3 weeks ago and am happy to report that they survived the season intact. I have refilled all of them with "energized" soil. (I took last year's stuff and added some manure, hay, and water. I let everything sit under a tarp in the sun for a few weeks and then shoveled it back in the fabric pots.) The soil is not ideal but, sometimes, situations dictate shortcuts. I've planted 2 eggplants and am getting ready to do the potatoes in the next week or so. The bags show no sign of wear and tear. Another big thumbs up!
S**C
Try them yourself!
These pots are everything they say they are.I've used a couple dozen for 3 years and only one broke and that was my fault.I hit it multiple times with the mower.I've used them in old AC drip pans and in crawfish eating trays to have a bottom reservoir,but they have worked best when I use a tarp to keep 2 or 3 inches of water to water them from below.The still work great on their own, but be prepared to water daily in the summer if there's no rain.They're more affordable than hard pots, so just get you some and try them out!
A**S
Great way to start a garden
We purchased a new house & with all of the move, repairs etc I was going to completely miss gardening this year. These bags were the perfect answer & I bought several sizes. I have a bag garden growing on our back deck & can't wait for the harvests!
G**L
Plants seem to like them
I purchased these as an experiment after watching Rusted Garden vlogs on You Tube. I bought the smaller bags as I had a few cuttings ready to transplant. To date the plants seem happy and if they’re happy I’m happy.
D**N
Good product. The pots are strong and can handle ...
Good product. The pots are strong and can handle the weight. What else can u really say about a pot lol. They'll do the job
O**Z
Buena calidad
La calidad de la tela es buena, no se rompe fácilmente y las costuras están aseguradas. En general, buena compra.
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