How to Set Up a DIY Bucket Container Garden (2024)

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Let’s make a portable DIY 5-gallon bucket container garden!

When I was going through my divorce, I had to live in my parents’ home for a little while until my home loan closed. I had to temporarily give up most aspects of homesteading, but I wanted to at least keep gardening. Growing food is a skill that I have been honing for years and skipping a season just didn’t feel right… plus it brings me joy and I definitely needed joy during that period of my life.

The issue I was facing is that I couldn’t plant a garden straight in the ground at my parent’s home and I wanted to be able to take mature plants with me to my new home. How in the world could I make a vegetable and herb garden work in a situation like that?

The answer→ a portable DIY bucket container garden! I thought about buying a bunch of large plant containers from the garden store, but I didn’t really have the money to spend on that. Then I remembered that I already had a bunch of 5-gallon buckets and I could manage to buy some more for just a few bucks each. So I got to work.

I grew tomatoes, herbs, and even persimmon trees in my bucket garden that year. It worked out so well and I just can’t wait for you to try it as well!

How to Set Up a DIY Bucket Container Garden (1)

What Can You Grow in a 5-Gallon Bucket?

Pretty much anything.

5-gallon buckets are honestly the perfect containers for any container garden. They are deep enough for root veggies like carrots, wide enough for heads of lettuce, broccoli, and cauliflower, and can even be used for vining plants if you add a stake or trellis.

  • Tomatoes
  • Peppers
  • Root Vegetable (not super deep)
  • Herbs
  • Young Trees
  • Compact/Bush Varieties
  • Lettuce
  • Kale
  • Cabbage
  • Brocolli
  • Strawberries

Why Should You Make a Bucket Garden?

Container gardening is a great way to become more sustainable when you have limited space or if you are in an “in-between” phase of life.And then when the garden season is over, the buckets can be repurposed into many other homestead bucket projects!

Planting in 5-gallon buckets is great if you:

  • Need to save space
  • Don’t have land
  • Have a need to move your garden
  • Want to expand outside of your normal garden space

You can plant straight in the buckets or you can get a little handy and make a vertical garden tower! If you want to make the buckets look a little more aesthetically pleasing, you can spray paint them any color you like.

How to Set Up a DIY Bucket Container Garden (2)

How to Garden in 5-Gallon Buckets

Making a DIY bucket container garden is a pretty straightforward process, but let’s walk through the steps to make sure your plants start out with the best foundation possible.

Materials needed:

  • Five-Gallon Buckets
  • Power Drill
  • Drill bit
  • Sticks or Rocks
  • Soil- Seed Starting Mix or Potting Mix
  • Water
  • Seeds or Plant Starts
  • Mulch

Instructions for a Bucket Container Garden:

1. Source Buckets

It is very important that you pay attention to where your buckets come from. If you purchase new food-grade buckets, no worries; however, if you find old buckets you will need to know what they were used for previously. Make sure that they did not hold chemicals or other materials that may be held in the plastic and leach into your soil.

How to Set Up a DIY Bucket Container Garden (3)

Buckets for a bucket garden can be purchased at your local feed store (I got mine at Tractor Supply), from online marketplaces like Amazon, or from local farms & businesses that may be tossing some out.

2. Drill Drainage Holes

Use a drill with a bit to drill ½” to 1” drainage holes in the bottom of each bucket. I like to go around the bottom of the bucket drilling a hole every 3-4 inches.

How to Set Up a DIY Bucket Container Garden (5)

3. Add Bulk to the Bottom

Toss some sticks or rocks into the bucket. You won’t need a lot here, just enough to displace the soil in the bottom to allow for better drainage.

4. Add the Growing Medium

Add your potting mix to the buckets. You can use a seed starting mix at the top if you are planting seeds directly into the buckets instead of using seed starting trays. If you are planting starts, use a store-bought or DIY potting mix.

How to Set Up a DIY Bucket Container Garden (6)

It is a good idea to wet the soil first or you can add water and mix the soil directly in the buckets. If you don’t pre-moisten the potting mix or seed starting mix, it is likely to repel water and cause your plants to dehydrate.

5. Place Plants

Now you can add your seeds or starts to the soil in your DIY bucket garden. Be sure to cover the plant’s roots well.

6. Add Mulch

This step is optional, but I highly recommend not skipping it. Placing a thin layer of mulch (like straw or wood chips) on top can help retain soil moisture by reducing the evaporation rate of the water. It can also keep the soil temperature a little bit cooler.

6. Water the Plants

Water the soil all the way through the first time. If you pre-moistened the soil, then you are good to go! Just add more water when the top of the soil begins to look dry. Avoid watering the leaves of plants as this can cause scorching.

How to Set Up a DIY Bucket Container Garden (8)

7. Enjoy Your DIY Bucket Garden

Now you can enjoy the fruits (and veggies) of your labor! Let me know how your bucket container garden turns out!

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FAQs

How many bags of soil do I need for a 5 gallon bucket? ›

Plastic Container Volume Chart
SizeGallonsBags of Soil (1.5 Cubic Feet)
5 Gallon5.001.6 Pots Per Bag
7 Gallon7.041.3 Pots Per Bag
10 Gallon12.741.4 Bags Per Pot
20 Gallon22.232.4 Bags Per Pot
5 more rows

How do you layout a garden container? ›

Containers can be grouped into vignettes the same way plants can. A triangular arrangement of pots will produce quick, pleasing results. In design terms, a triangle consists of a dominant central element flanked by components of smaller stature. This form is a staple of all art forms for good reason: It always works.

What vegetables grow best in buckets? ›

Vegetables which are ideally suited for growing in containers include tomatoes, peppers, eggplant, green onions, beans, lettuce, squash, radishes and parsley. Pole beans and cucumbers also do well in this type of garden, but they do require considerably more space because of their vining growth habit.

How do you start a container garden from scratch? ›

10 Steps to Container Gardening
  1. Choose a container. There are many container options available, so choose one that fits your style. ...
  2. Prepare your container. ...
  3. Fill your container with soil. ...
  4. Add a good starter food. ...
  5. Pick your plants. ...
  6. Prepare your plants. ...
  7. Plant! ...
  8. Water.
Apr 1, 2019

What vegetables grow well in 5 gallon buckets? ›

Here are a few of the best vegetables to grow in buckets:
  • Eggplants.
  • Tomatoes.
  • Winter squash.
  • Cucumbers.
  • Tomatillos.
  • Ground cherries.
  • Pole beans.
  • Zucchini.
Dec 16, 2021

What is the best potting soil for container vegetables? ›

A lightweight soil that holds nutrients and moisture, yet drains well, is essential for good results. Garden soil is too heavy for use in containers. Soil substitutes consisting of mixtures of peat moss and sand or perlite or vermiculite, amended with lime and fertilizer, work very well.

How many quarts of potting soil for a 5 gallon bucket? ›

Size of Bag and Approximate Number of Pots It Fills
Pot type & sizeApproximate soil volume of pot*(dry quarts*)32-qt bag
5 gallon14
HANGING BASKETS
10 inch5.5
12 inch7.94
26 more rows

How many plants can you grow in a 5 gallon bucket? ›

Put One plant in a 5-gal. container & it's size will equal the size of it's root system. Put two in the same space & each plant will be stunted due to overcrowding or one may choke the others root system completely, leaving you with one stunted plant & one dead plant.

What is the rule of thumb for container gardening? ›

Keep the size and quantity of plants in proportion to the pot. Rule of thumb – The height of the tallest plant shouldn't exceed one to two times the height of a tall container or the width of a low bowl. When the container has a pedestal, it's usually not necessary to include it in the overall container measurement.

How to make a container garden look nice? ›

As you arrange the plants in the pot, symmetry isn't essential, but picking up color echoes to tie the plants together is always nice. The thrillers, fillers and spillers concept works the same for small and large pots as well as pots clustered together in groupings.

When should I start my bucket garden? ›

It's much easier in the warm, brighter days of late spring and early summer. Even mid-summer or early autumn is not too late to start. There is, of course, nothing wrong with starting seeds in early spring; just bear in mind that it does get easier later in the year.

What is the easiest vegetable to grow in a container? ›

Lettuce. Lettuce is one of the easiest vegetables to grow in a container. It grows quickly and has shallow roots. Once it grows, you can pluck it directly for your salads and sandwiches.

Do tomatoes grow well in buckets? ›

Tomatoes grow nicely in 5-gallon buckets (both Determinate and semi-Determinate tomato cultivars.) This way of growing tomatoes is ideal for DIY garden containers and small spaces. Fill your drilled bucket with potting soil, add your fertilizer, and plant the tomato half the height of their main stem.

How many squash plants per 5 gallon bucket? ›

Squash: Grow one plant in a 5-gallon (19L) container, larger is better. Plant two vining plants in a 10-gallon (38L) container. Sweet Potatoes: Use a 20-gallon (76L) container or half whiskey barrel. Swiss Chard: Grow plants in 12-inch (30 cm) or larger pots; thin plants to 8 inches apart.

How many tomato plants per 5 gallon bucket? ›

The Benefits of Using 5-Gallon Buckets

The standard size of these buckets allows for at least two tomato plants per bucket. This makes them an efficient use of space in small gardens or balcony spaces.

How many cucumber plants per 5 gallon bucket? ›

Two or three plants will fit in a five-gallon bucket or grow one cucumber in a 10-inch-wide container. Mix soil with equal parts of compost, potting soil, perlite and peat moss. The compost or rotted manure will get plants off to a good start, or blend in granules of a balanced fertilizer, such as 10-10-10.

References

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