Transplant to raise bed

FosterBD

Active Member
I was thinking of transplanting my strawberry cheesecake photo to my raised bed. I already have two plants on each end about 4 x 12 raised bed garden all organic self-sufficient garden. I think I can support a third plant but I’m no expert and this is my first organic run. Any insight on adding a third plant or is that just gonna be too much and I should keep it potted. They are 100days young. I’m in 5 gallon pot now I transplanted 3 of my others into 10 gallons pots.IMG_8124.jpegIMG_8124.jpegIMG_8127.jpegIMG_8126.jpeg
 

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mandocat

Well-Known Member
I was thinking of transplanting my strawberry cheesecake photo to my raised bed. I already have two plants on each end about 4 x 12 raised bed garden all organic self-sufficient garden. I think I can support a third plant but I’m no expert and this is my first organic run. Any insight on adding a third plant or is that just gonna be too much and I should keep it potted. They are 100days young. I’m in 5 gallon pot now I transplanted 3 of my others into 10 gallons pots.View attachment 5409531View attachment 5409531View attachment 5409532View attachment 5409533
I would be concerned about air flow if you put a 3rd plant in there but alot of people get away with crowding their plants. If I were going to plant into a pot outdoors I would go with at least a 20 gallon, so that it wouldn't dry out as fast. But I am in the south, so heat, humidity and mold are big concerns.
 

FosterBD

Active Member
I would be concerned about air flow if you put a 3rd plant in there but alot of people get away with crowding their plants. If I were going to plant into a pot outdoors I would go with at least a 20 gallon, so that it wouldn't dry out as fast. But I am in the south, so heat, humidity and mold are big concerns.
Thanks I ended up transplanting into a 10gal pot for that very reason.
 
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