{"id":785,"date":"2013-09-05T11:25:49","date_gmt":"2013-09-04T23:25:49","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/growgoodnz.co.nz\/?p=785"},"modified":"2013-09-05T11:25:49","modified_gmt":"2013-09-04T23:25:49","slug":"planter-boxes","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/growgoodnz.co.nz\/interesting-articles\/planter-boxes\/","title":{"rendered":"Planter Box and how to use it for celery"},"content":{"rendered":"

A planter box is a great way to grow celery.<\/p>\n

Growing celery in a planter box is a great challenge which makes it all the more rewarding. The crisp clean taste of eating your own organically grown celery bears no resemblance to the chemically-pumped up supermarket varieties.<\/p>\n

Conditions for growing celery in a planter box<\/b><\/h3>\n

Plant seedlings in September to December or March-April. Plant when soil conditions in the planter box is 12-21 deg C. Celery prefers mild to cool conditions but also does well in warmer climates in late summer and autumn. They survive frosts. As the seeds are very slow to germinate it is better to start with seedlings. Allow for 8 plants per small GreenSmart TM\u00a0<\/sup>pot or 12 per large GreenSmart TM\u00a0<\/sup>pot . As celery originated in wetland areas it needs plenty of water and nutrients. Allow for a minimum of 6 hours sun per day but protect from hot sun during hotter months. Blanching prevents bitterness. You can partially blanch by tying twine around the plant to force the stalks together.<\/p>\n

Did you know that you can also re-grow celery by cutting off the base from a bunch of store-bought celery?<\/p>\n

Planting suggestion<\/strong>: Inter-plant 6 celery plants with 6 lettuce plants. The lettuce will be ready to eat in 3-4 weeks. By the time lettuce is finished the celery will be 30 cm high and you can replace the lettuces with another 6 celery plants to give continuity.<\/p>\n

\"planter<\/a>

Ready to eat celery with young celery plants in small pot<\/p><\/div>\n

Fertiliser<\/b><\/p>\n

Prepare the planter boxes with plenty of nutrients and rich humus eg compost, animal manure, blood and bone, sheep manure pellets, Yates Dynamic Lifter. Supplement with additional liquid fertilisers during growth period. Be generous with fertiliser to avoid stringy and bitter celery.<\/p>\n

Pests and Diseases<\/b><\/p>\n

The younger plants might be attacked by slugs and snails. Check after dark and apply digital control! If the plants develop distorted leaves or cracked stems it is indicative of boron deficiency so spray with liquid seaweed like Natrakelp. http:\/\/www.natrakelp.com\/<\/p>\n

Avoid splashing water off the soil up onto the plants. This will reduce the risk of fungal infections when growing celery in planter boxes.<\/p>\n

Companions<\/b><\/p>\n

Celery plants like the company of beans, cabbage, onion, spinach, tomatoes, nasturtium.<\/p>\n

Harvesting<\/b><\/p>\n

When growing celery in a planter box take care when removing outside stalks that you don\u2019t move the whole plant as celery is shallow rooted. Cut the stalk just below the soil line. The inner stalks are more tender than the outer stalks so are better for eating raw. \u00a0By picking the outer stalks like silverbeet you will be able to continue harvesting over a 2-3 month period.<\/p>\n

 <\/p>\n

Spring Clean<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n

Now is a good time to clean up your GreenSmart planter box in preparation for another season\u2019s growing.<\/em><\/p>\n