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Flickr Find Canned Garden

060208_cans.jpg We found this affordable way to start a garden from Flickr User Happy Sleepy: reuse those giant cans that pizza sauce and stewed tomatoes come in, spray them a fun color (use a rust resistant paint), drill a hole in the bottom for drainage and plant away. More pictures after the jump:

 
 

060208_cans2.jpg
060208_cans3.jpgYou can talk to your local pizzeria (like Abbot's Pizza Company) and get their extra cans or just save up any cans or jars that you're using in the kitchen.

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gardening, garden, diy, how to, cheap, container garden, affordable, flickr find, pizza can

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Comments (11)

this is a great idea! i love it!

posted by indiasoup on June 2nd 2008 at 9:56am
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I love the sheer creativity of this. It symbolizes much of what we all love. Unique, personal, stylish, and chic reuse.

posted by quiltmaster on June 2nd 2008 at 10:04am
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I love this idea up and down, however I don't know how you'd attach it. :/

posted by Mazz on June 2nd 2008 at 10:09am
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beautiful! we've done this out on our back steps.... we're growing all of our herbs in tomato cans... except they're a brand from whole foods with beautiful labels that we've decided to leave intact!

i had one can that i had painted a high gloss red and was growing a couple of sweet pea's in... but they fell victim to the kitten!

posted by closertotheocean on June 2nd 2008 at 10:23am
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yeah -- how are they attached to the brick?

posted by kimg924 on June 2nd 2008 at 10:26am
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masonry screws i guess...

posted by little flower on June 2nd 2008 at 10:37am
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i wondered the same thing as everyone else: how they were attached to the brick. however, if you click the link to her flickr page and view the picture full-size, you can see how it's attached - and it (a) makes sense and (b) looks do-able! hooray!

posted by katiebug on June 2nd 2008 at 10:41am
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I'd leave 'em unpainted, in the right urban environment.

posted by Lisa (Montreal) on June 2nd 2008 at 11:06am
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Just remember that this can only been done as a temporary measure, in cool climates or in shade. The first time you get a hot day or full sun, the cans will heat up and roast the roots within, killing the plant instantly.

There's a reason why most plant pots are made of non-conductive materials like clay or plastic.

posted by Blandwagon on June 2nd 2008 at 4:41pm
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i agree with Blandwagon. Two years ago I hung small galvanized buckets that I purchased from Home Depot for about $1.99 each in the paint department. By the end of the summer, the plants weren't doing well and the buckets were rusty. It was a really nice effect -- shiny silver and greens -- for a bit.

posted by katalyst on June 2nd 2008 at 6:42pm
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First rainstorm hits and you have drainage and all the dirt that comes with it streaming down your walls.

Isn’t it sad that coffee cans are now plastic?


http://www.dcrinteriors.com

posted by DCR Interiors on June 2nd 2008 at 6:54pm
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