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Cheap plastic plant pots

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Jon Rouse

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Dec 9, 2002, 4:54:49 PM12/9/02
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Last year we bought some 1 Litre pots from our local nursery for a few
pence each. This year we were told they hadn't got any. Where do URGlers
buy cheap pots from, most of ours are only used for a year before we pot
things on, so they don't have to be stunningly robust.

Jon
--
Jon Rouse

Stephen Howard

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Dec 10, 2002, 5:02:24 PM12/10/02
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I get mine from the local refuse tip.... this time of year you can
often pick up a sackload ( quite literally ) for a couple of quid.
They need washing and disinfecting, mind you.

Regards,

--
Stephen Howard - Woodwind repairs & period restorations
http://www.shwoodwind.co.uk
Emails to: showard{who is at}shwoodwind{dot}co{dot}uk

Chris Doran

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Dec 10, 2002, 8:09:19 PM12/10/02
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Jon Rouse <ne...@timewarp.demon.co.uk> wrote in message news:<dly3eCAp...@timewarp.demon.co.uk>...

I just cut down plastic soft drinks bottles & drill a few holes in the bottoms.

Chris

Carol Russell

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Dec 10, 2002, 11:04:57 PM12/10/02
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The contractors that plant up the council properties and traffic roundabout
around here will often give them away as the don't reuse them.


--
Art
Swap seeds and plants and visit many specialist garden forums at
Garden Web http://www.gardenweb.com
My Garden Web exchange page http://www.gardenweb.com/members/exch/art1952
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Chris Doran

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Dec 11, 2002, 8:46:24 PM12/11/02
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chris...@postmaster.co.uk (Chris Doran) wrote in message news:<948f0720.02121...@posting.google.com>...

I might add that if you slice off the bottoms, they make great
bell-cloches, and the bottom bit (if flat) acts as a saucer for the
next size "pot" down. Leave the cap on the "cloches", as otherwise
slugs do a great up-and-over, followed by a trapeze act to gulp down
your plants from the top down.

Chris

cormaic

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Dec 12, 2002, 8:39:56 AM12/12/02
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'Twas Wed, 11 Dec 2002 04:04:57 -0000, when "Carol Russell"
<Russ...@queenborough42.freeserve.co.uk> enriched all our lives with
these worthy thoughts:

>The contractors that plant up the council properties and traffic roundabout
>around here will often give them away as the don't reuse them.

I was about to mention that! Many landscaping contractors have
bloody huge piles of the damned things and are more than happy to get
rid of some in exchange for a few beer vouchers. Look in your Yellow
Pages.
For the more popular commercially planted items (cornus,
euonymus, phormiums, etc) most contractors try to buy-in with those
flimsy plastic bag pots or in bio-degradable wrappers that help to
reduce the amount of 'packaging' they are left with after a large
contract, but the vast majority of plants are still supplied in rigid
plastic pots.

--
cormaic URG faqs/webring - www.tmac.clara.co.uk/urgring/
Culcheth Garden - www.tmac.clara.co.uk/garden/
Warrington Paving - www.pavingexpert.com/
Peoples' Republic of South Lancashire

cormaic CAN BE FOUND AT borlochshall.co.uk

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