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Growing plants in self watering containers (SWC)




While growing plants, watering these plants is a very necessary process. But you need to make sure that you remember to water them regularly. Failing to do so means that your plants could suffer and not grow like you would like them to grow. In addition, different seasons and different plants require different watering conditions.
So, you must be thinking “Why could we not have a system where plants could get water as and when required; why should I have to know the peculiar conditions for watering depending on the plant and the weather?”. There is actually a solution to this problem in the form of something called “Self Watering Container” (SWC).
Self Watering Containers obviously cannot generate water by themselves; however, they solve the problem of ensuring water when required by setting up a bottom chamber that is a water reservoir and above which is the potting mix along with the roots of the plants. The roots pick up water by osmosis, ensuring that water is drawn when required; leading to an improvement in the growing abilities of most plants. Read this article that explains this in more details (link):

You can make SWCs out of many different types of containers, including kitty litter buckets and 5-gallon buckets, which are, of course, smaller than the 18-gallon storage tubs but will serve nicely for a pepper plant, one of the smaller varieties of eggplant, and other plants.
# If you are growing vegetables in containers anyway, then the SWCs make life much easier: you only have to water every few days rather than every day (or even multiple times per day in the case of large plants in traditional containers).
# An even-better reason for using SWCs rather than traditional containers is that the vegetables grow very much better in them. I’d say that – per square foot of container surface – SWCs give you at least twice the yield of traditional containers, and probably even more.

Read the whole article to understand the advantage (as well as disadvantages) in more detail.






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