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Container Garden Planner & Spacing Calculator

DonnéesMathématiques
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Container

Ø
L
W
D
Inside depth available for soil

Plant

Container & Soil

Métrique Valeur
Container volume -
Soil needed (85% fill) -
Usable surface area -
Depth check -

Planting

Métrique Valeur
Plant -
Recommended spacing -
Plants this container holds -
Minimum container depth -
Sun exposure -
Watering frequency -

Companion Planting

Pick a plant to see companion suggestions.
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Guide

Container Garden Planner & Spacing Calculator

Container Garden Planner & Spacing Calculator

Plug in your pot size and the plant you want to grow, and instantly see how many will fit, how much potting mix to buy, whether the container is deep enough, and which neighbours will help (or hurt) your harvest. Built for balcony gardeners, apartment growers and tabletop herb fans.

Comment utiliser

  1. Pick your unit system (cm / litres or inches / gallons).
  2. Choose the container shape — round or rectangular — and enter its inside dimensions and depth.
  3. Select the plant you want to grow from the herb, leafy-green or vegetable list.
  4. Read the results: container volume, soil needed (with 15% headspace), plants the pot can hold, depth check, sun requirement, watering frequency and companion-planting suggestions.
  5. Switch units, plant or shape at any time — the calculator updates instantly.

Caractéristiques

  • Soil & volume math – Calculates total container volume from round or rectangular dimensions and recommends a soil quantity that leaves room at the rim.
  • Plant capacity – Uses the recommended spacing for each plant to estimate how many specimens the container can support without crowding.
  • Depth check – Flags pots that are too shallow for a chosen crop’s root system before you waste seeds or seedlings.
  • Watering & sun guide – Surfaces a baseline watering interval and the sun exposure each plant prefers.
  • Companion planting – Suggests plants that thrive together and warns about combinations gardeners commonly avoid.
  • Metric & imperial – Switch units on the fly; existing dimensions are converted automatically.

FAQ

  1. Why does container depth matter more than width for many plants?

    Roots grow downward in search of water and nutrients, and many vegetables (tomatoes, peppers, carrots, eggplant) develop a deep tap-root or extensive root mass. A pot can be wide but if it is shallow the roots hit the bottom, circle, and become root-bound — which limits nutrient uptake, dries the soil out faster and stunts the plant. Width influences how many plants fit; depth determines whether they grow at all.

  2. What is companion planting and does it actually work?

    Companion planting pairs species that benefit each other through pest deterrence, pollinator attraction, nutrient sharing or microclimate effects (e.g. taller plants shading shorter ones). Some pairings are well-supported by research — basil near tomatoes repels certain pests, beans fix nitrogen useful to leafy greens — while others are folklore. The general guidance reduces monoculture risk and tends to improve yield even when individual mechanisms are debated.

  3. How much soil should I leave at the top of a container?

    Aim for roughly 2–3 cm (about an inch) of empty space between the soil surface and the rim. This headspace catches water during deep watering so it can soak in instead of running off, and gives mulch room. Filling to the very top wastes water and washes soil out every time you irrigate.

  4. Why do container plants need more frequent watering than ground plants?

    Containers have a limited soil volume that heats up faster, holds less moisture, and is exposed to wind on multiple sides. Roots cannot reach deeper layers to find water as they would in the ground. Smaller pots in particular can dry out within a single hot day, which is why moisture-hungry crops like cherry tomatoes and cucumbers benefit from larger containers and self-watering reservoirs.

  5. What is the difference between recommended spacing and minimum spacing?

    Recommended spacing is the distance between plants that lets each individual reach full mature size with adequate light, airflow and root volume. Minimum spacing is how close you can plant if you accept smaller individual yields — useful for cut-and-come-again leafy greens but harmful for fruiting crops. This calculator uses recommended spacing so the projected plant count reflects healthy, productive specimens.

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