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container Rain and Container Gardening

This is my first year taking my pepper plants seriously. I'm growing strictly in containers this year and have some questions about dealing with rain. Do all y'all container growers shelter your plants from rain to control the moisture  in the soil? It seems like it would be a PITA to have to move a bunch of pots and buckets every time rain rolls in. I'm guessing I just need to make sure my soil and pots have good drainage?
 
Thank you juanitos. I think I've been using crappy pots the past few years. My old lady keeps telling me we need the ones with the "water saver" tray built into the bottom.. she was upset with me when I drilled holes in them  :crazy:
 
I use 5 gallon buckets.Food Grade.There are also some plants in 1,2.3,4 gallons too.I have some 4 gallon square buckets,that work really well.If you look around for buckets,they are free most of the time.Then you will have more money for perlite and potting soil. Just remember like juanitos say plenty of holes.BTW my soil isn't the best,but I try to keep it well drain.I am also learning new stuff about peppers and other types of plants.If you haven't checked juanitos Glog out yet,It's really worth looking at.There a lot of good informant all around the forums check them out too.  :drunk:  The most important thing is to have fun growing your peppers. :cheers:  
 
When you transplant seedlings into their final outside container, it is good to use light, fluffy soil, but to also do something else.


Give them very little water at first. Do NOT listen to the old wives tale that you are supposed to get the soil really damp then water them in really good right after transplanting. It's much better to only give them a small amount of water then, and continue to only give small amounts at a time for the first few weeks.


Later in the season, it is often better to wait longer and water more each time you do water, but at first the goal to maintain good soil drainage and aeration, is to give the plant roots a chance to grow into the soil around them before large amounts of water start to compact it, so the roots suspend the soil at its present elevation. By doing this you can end up with soil that after a couple months, literally bounces up and down like a sponge because the roots have good structure in it, but conversely, that drains better than more compacted soil, instead of holding so much water like a sponge.


Even then, if you are getting several inches of rain in a short period of time, it is good to move plants to a sheltered area, but otherwise if you are following the minimal watering suggested above, soil that starts out drier doesn't have as much excess when it rains. If pots are just too large to be manageable and the rain just won't stop coming then you can wrap plastic around the base of the plants, over the soil, draped so the rain runs off instead of into the pot. If you have nothing else, garbage bags will work then you can reuse them for garbage when their plant duty is finished. They don't have to perfectly protect the pot from every drop of rain, just to divert a large % of it.
 
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