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If you
can't pass a container
without wondering how it
would look filled with
potted plants, you are not
alone. Americans have
become wild about potted
plants according to this
May 2008 news release from
Texas A&M University
Americans hard to contain
on potted plant
expenditures
|
COLLEGE STATION –
When it comes to
using
plant-filled pots
on the porch or
around the
landscape,
Americans are
hardly able to
contain
themselves.
U.S. consumers
spend more than
$1.3 billion a
year on this
gardening method,
according to
Container
Gardening
Associated, an
online site
devoted to the
technique.
Container
gardens, the use
of a variety of
plants in any
type of
container, are
often associated
with yardless
apartments or
condominiums. But
they also are
popular with the
elderly and
disabled , as
well as for areas
where soil
quality is a
problem or where
pots define an
area or direct
traffic. |
|

Container
gardening
has
grown
to a
more
than
$1.3
billion
annual
business
in the
US. A
variety
of
plants
can be
mixed
to
create
different
effects.
A new
study
indicates
people
want
more
information
about
how to
care
for the
plants.
Photo
from
Texas
AgriLife
Research |
|
Retailers
can
cash in
on
container
gardening
by
offering
more
extensive
plant
care
information,
making
plant
and
container
selection
easy
and
pricing
the
pre-planted
or
do-it-yourself
containers
properly,
according
to a
new
study
by Dr.
Terri
Starman,
Texas
AgriLife
Research
horticulturist.
|
|

Photo from Texas AgriLife Research
|
|
“We
found
that
there
is a
potential
to
increase
the
value
of a
container
garden
through
providing
educational
material
with
the
purchase,”
Starman
said.
The
study,
in the
current
issue
of the
journal
HortScience,
also
found
that
most
people
prefer
a
container
garden
with a
complementary
color
harmony
in the
price
range
of $25.
|
|
|
Complementary
colors are
opposite each
other on the
color wheel.
Starman said the
research is
useful for
retailers,
particularly as
the U.S. economy
slips.
Previous
studies have
shown that in
hard economic
times, people
continue to
garden - perhaps
even more so
because they stay
close to home to
save money,
Starman said.
“The trend toward
‘green’ awareness
calling us to
reduce our carbon
footprint also
pertains to
container
gardening,” she
said. “Everything
in container
gardening is
confined, so it
takes less water
and other inputs.
And people are
using them not
only for flowers
but for growing
vegetables and
herbs as food
prices increase.”
|
|
When container
gardening became
trendy about 10
years ago,
retailers were
initially
hesitant for fear
that the plants
would not last
long and the
consumer would
become
dissatisfied,
Starman noted.
“So retailers
have developed
ways to provide
containers that
last longer,” she
said. “For the
money, a
container lasts
longer than a
similarly priced
bottle of wine or
dinner out, for
example, and
that’s important
to the consumer.”
But retailers
didn’t stop
there,
she said. Some
are already
offering
“take-home packs”
of plants
marketed to
replenish annual
plants that have
died in
containers or to
change out
seasonally.
|
|

Container
gardening
accounts
for
about
$1.3
billion
in
annual
sales
in the
US. A
recent
study
indicates
consumers
want
more
information
about
how to
care
for the
plants
Photo
from
Texas
AgriLife
Research |
|
|
The next major
push, Starman
believes, will be
toward the
education,
increased care
information
requested by
people in the
study. More
than
three-fourths of
the respondents
in Starman’s
study, an online
survey, said they
would be more
likely to
purchase a
container garden
if extensive
information was
provided, and 85
percent said they
would be willing
to visit a Web
site to obtain
that information.
“Developing
Web sites for the
information would
save growers the
expense of
putting tags for
all the plants,
especially if
there are
multiple plants
in one
container,” she
pointed out.
Starman said
additional
research is
needed,
particularly on
the pricing side
of container
gardening,
because there are
two types of
consumers for
this product: the
do-it-yourself
type and the
do-it-for-me
type.
“Some are
willing to spend
a lot more money
for a beautiful
container
garden,” she
said. “And there
is also a market
for servicing
container
gardens,
especially for
independent
nursery operators
who can sell it,
deliver it,
maintain it and
change it out
seasonally, for
example.”
|
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Make
your garden's blossoms last all year long
with a photo display from
Garden
Treasures
A Center Yourself in Greene
Business Partner |
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Be
good to the environment by planting daylilies. Drought
and pest resistant, they need nothing nature doesn't already
provide.
Carol Sarginger Daylily Gardens
434-985-9861 csarginger@aol.com |
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