
Square Foot Gardens are a terrific choice for gardening in small spaces. After planting Square Foot plots for several years I gave them up to grow a beautiful rose garden. With food shortages looming, and prices skyrocketing this Spring, I decided the time was right to grow a few vegetables again. I didn’t want to dig another garden into the yard, and wanted to try something temporary. I’ve combined Square Foot with container gardening and it is growing well in the first days of June.

The garden needed a border; the largest expense was the fencing. This keeps the area neat and also helped in laying out the proper measurements. Dollar store buckets, two and a half gallons, were an inexpensive choice for the containers. I created drainage holes by thrusting my spading fork once into the buckets as they sat on the grass. The holes were perfectly spaced, and my lawn aerated a bit too. Garden fabric cut large enough to cover the area keeps the grass from growing up between the pots. Filling the buckets with a mixture of organic container soil and vermiculite was easy using the wheelbarrow to mix it.


Swiss Chard, Kale, and Bok Choy have been very plentiful. Steamed with carrots, mixed with a little butter, and ladled over Jasmine Rice, oh my, so delicious.

The tomatoes already need watering every day, their stems appear more like small tree trunks than normal sized garden plants. I have them in the back of the gardens, braced against trellises for support. Small palettes between the plots keep the grass down also. I’m growing a large variety of vegetables to take note of how each plant performs. Too early to know what will succeed as of now, but the green beans, four plants to a bucket, are getting small beans after flowering. I’ll update as the summer progresses.

So far, the only antagonist to my garden joy is the yellow squash. There have been many flowers, and several small squash, but all developed blossom rot. I’ll read up on this problem and apply what might help. If I find a solution that works I will post the results. Here’s a photo of another squash, white squash, I am hoping it will perform better.
PS Between the time of writing the first draft of this post, and now, the small green beans grew large enough for a first tasting. Delicious! Food grown in a dollar store bucket: an achievement that might come in handy if the world keeps spinning toward higher inflation and food shortages in the future.
Great idea. But…It might not really hit until this fall and winter. what then? I may need to recover my hoop house and try to grow. Some seed lately hasn’t done so well/
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I am trying to think of a way to move these into the house to use if the worst I imagine ever arrives. Maybe negative thinking, but I am thinking fall and winter too.
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“They ” keep warning us and with all the food plants going down it may be for real. Read this morning over 10,000 cattle have died from heat at a Kansas feed lot. Just terrible.
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I was reading a list yesterday of all the plants that had major catastrophes, fires, explosions, etc. The poultry destroyed has been in the millions. It is terrible.
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When I began this project, I was thinking of something portable.
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I love this idea! I have plenty of room for a regular garden and do have a large one. I am going to have to share this idea with my sister who lives in town on a very small lot.
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I harvested some green beans this week. Enough for a side dish for two. There were even leftovers. They were delicious. I was surprised by how many I was able to harvest from just three buckets, three to four plants in each. It’s a good way to garden. I have a good sized yard, but it is surrounded by pines and doesn’t get sun on the fringes of the yard. These buckets are right in the middle. They get all the sun they need. Thanks so much for stopping by and the comment.
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I like what you did here. I like the fencing. This year I ended up just stacking a BUNCh of pallets on top of each other, about 4-5 high. I put my pots on top o them. This kept them raised AND in pots. It was a good experimental year. I’m going to do it again next year.
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Sounds like fun…maybe I will try it next year.
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