This is working better than I could have imagined in ways I didn’t expect. To find a simple, low cost way for people who were otherwise unable to grow vegetables to actually grow some of their own food was all I set out to do. I suppose you could say that was enough of a challenge since I started on the assumption that I’m planning for a small family or a working couple with a townhouse deck of condo terrace or balcony. I’m allowing for the fact that they might travel on business which would leave their container garden possibly untended for up to a week – maybe more.
And of course the vegetables would need to be organically grown- to do anything else runs so far against the trend as to be a waste of time.
The first bonus was a cut and come again salad greens garden that not only grows well in its hydroponic garden but has produced a better yield than expected. In fact that advantage continues to grow.

Even though the lettuce has bolted....
The oak leaf lettuce in the shot to my right has got leaves that have extended a long way up the stem. if this lettuce had been planted in the ground it would be completely inedible, since once it starts to bolt salad greens are incredibly bitter. This lettuce still tastes terrific. It’s still tender and not bitter and a true delight.
I’ve concentrated the harvest lately on one half of the garden so I can pull it up and reseed for the second season – which should be good becuase it seems that summer does not really want to come to Toronto this year.

Still many salads left on the left
As you can see, the left hand side of the garden where I backed off a bit for the last three meals has tons of greens left, so while the right hand side re-sprouts, I’ll be dining on the left.
I’ve also been playing with the design for the tomatos and the real question is just how small can the pots be to produce a good yield. I’ll let you know more about that soon because I’ve got a Brandywine heritage tomato and a beefsteak tomato in what are definitely undersized pots. They got a later start than I would have liked, but they’re starting to take off now.
Looking over the numbers I’ll be able – I think- to bring different variations of this garden plan to market starting at about $60.00 . Still sorting out the line up and confirming what works.

Beefsteaks tomato

New Tomato Garden Test

Salad Greens
If you’re ever looking for a better way to relax go into a garden. Even now when I have my crazy junior bonsai nursery growing down the side and a wide collection of pots and bags with tomatoes and cucumbers and peppers, squash and herbs, its still the most peaceful place in my world.
And even though I’m trying to develop a product - urban hydro gardens and bring them to market and I’m still fine tuning the prototypes and starting to juggle the numbers. Sitting ( or standing) around plants that I’m growing is the most soul easing place in the world. I sincerely believe that anyone who loves to grow plants gets the same feeling. It can be stretched a little out of shape now and then, when the slugs are eating holes in my pepper leaves and the earwigs are treating my romaine lettuce like a high rise condo.
It makes me wonder if people with other passions get the same sense of peace or if maybe this is just something special that’s given to people who love to ( or is that need to? ) grow things.
The great summer experiment this year is coming along very well and I’m very close to finalizing a design for a balcony, patio, deck or terrace (whatever you want to call a small private space with no place to stick a shovel) hydroponic vegetable garden. It’s very exciting because at this point I have a design that not only is dead simple to work with and is recognizable to just about anyone as a garden but it can also be brought to market for a better price than anything else out there.
I can swear to you that the plants I have in the hydroponic gardens are growing better than my pampered little beauties in their pots of compost- and they are much easier to care for- probably because I don’t have to water them every day and don’t need to worry that they’re going to just about expire if we get a hot day and I’m not around to water them
This is what I was aiming for when I started this project. High yield, organic and super low maintenance vegetable gardens in a small space. It’s all coming together now, but there was one thing I had forgotten about – Earwigs!
In my 20’s I did battle with them, only to learn that it isn’t worth the trouble and now I have them again, hiding in the lettuce, dining on my basil and chewing great jeezly holes in my peppers. Thirty years later and almost nothing has changed – except me.
So, we covered sunlight already – the only thing you can’t do too much about, unless you’re going to cut down a few trees or demolish the neighbours garage, which is probably not a great idea.
The next thing to think about is the question “Why?” as in’ Why do you want to grow your own vegetables?”
If you want access to favoured or hard to find treats like oriental eggplants or thai basil or snow peas that don’t have the texture of cardboard, or heritage tomatoes- thats one possible reason.
Another is that you’d simply like to grow a few vegetables that you and your family like and ýou want to know beyond a shadow of a doubt that they are organic, chemical free and as fresh as possible. Another perfectly valid reason.
Another reason is that, even though you don’t have much room you want a vegetable garden that will make a solid contribution to your families consumption by improving the quality of what you get and at the same time saving some money. Value is good.
Or just maybe you’ve simply been bitten by a desire to grow something, because it will make your soul happy. Welcome.
Every reason is a good one. Heck I don’t think there can possibly be a bad reason for growing a vegetable garden. But if you’re going to be growing on a patio, balcony or deck , space will be at a premium. If you want to be happy with the result, it won’t hurt to give a little thought to what result you’ll be happy with.
Every reason I’ve outlined will take you down a slightly different path when you plan your own garden- and anything is possible.
If you want to grow vegetables and you don’t have a lot of room, it doesn’t really matter if you have a balcony, a deck, a patio or simply a small unplantable space because what you’ll all have in common is the need to plant your vegetables in containers.
And everyone is working with the same simple equalizer- sunlight. If you want to grow vegetables you need sunlight and lots of it and preferably you need sun morning – noon and afternoon.
The amount of sunlight you get is the number one factor you need to take into consideration if you want to grow vegetables in containers and it’s probably the only consideration that you won’t be able to find a work-around for.
I’d say as a rule of thumb your bare minimum to grow vegetables is 5 hours of direct light and I mean direct afternoon sun. A spot that only gets morning sun simply will not cut it- sorry. So think of sun from lunch to 5 and remember that’s the minimum. You’ll get growth and a few things will grow reasonably well- but most of your plants will never hit their maximum potential unless they get the light all day.
This is especially true of tomatoes. They are -without a doubt -the numero uno vegetable choice, which you have to admit is a little ironic since technically, tomatoes are not a vegetable- they’re a fruit. sorry I couldn’t resist.