Reddit Reddit reviews CO-Z Portable Greenhouse Mini Hot House with PE and Non-Woven Cover, Waterproof Cloche Greenhouse and UV Protected Greenhouse Tent, 5.9 x 3.0 x 3.0 Feet.

We found 1 Reddit comments about CO-Z Portable Greenhouse Mini Hot House with PE and Non-Woven Cover, Waterproof Cloche Greenhouse and UV Protected Greenhouse Tent, 5.9 x 3.0 x 3.0 Feet.. Here are the top ones, ranked by their Reddit score.

Gardening & Lawn Care
Greenhouses
Patio, Lawn & Garden
Greenhouses & Accessories
CO-Z Portable Greenhouse Mini Hot House with PE and Non-Woven Cover, Waterproof Cloche Greenhouse and UV Protected Greenhouse Tent, 5.9 x 3.0 x 3.0 Feet.
GOOD SIZED PORTABLE MINI GREENHOUSE, 5.9โ€™ L x 3.0โ€™ W x 3.0โ€™ H, weighs 5.5 lbs. super convenient to carry around for seasonal use.USER-FRIENDLY DESIGN, a zippered roll-up entrance for easy access, rust-resistant tubes for durability, and screened ventilation for ultimate air circulation. Greenhouses are lightweight yet sturdy enough to ensure long-lasting use.DUAL COVER FOR ALL SEASONS, comes with PE cloth and non-woven fabric cover to accommodate different needs in various weather conditions.MULTIPLE FUNCTIONS, UV protected, Waterproof, Reinforced. It is perfect for creating warmth and insulation, while allowing air, moisture and sunlight to filter through for optimal growing conditions.MINIMAL ASSEMBLY, plastic connectors take the place of assembly hardware, so this small greenhouse can be up in no time.
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1 Reddit comment about CO-Z Portable Greenhouse Mini Hot House with PE and Non-Woven Cover, Waterproof Cloche Greenhouse and UV Protected Greenhouse Tent, 5.9 x 3.0 x 3.0 Feet.:

u/TableTopFarmer ยท 1 pointr/UrbanHomestead

>far alone

I am often far alone in my garden, happy just to be in the midst of so many green lives. :>D Particularly this year.

After a long stretch of crises that interfered with my growing obsession, I have been able to return to it at last. I am pleasantly surprised to see what a great collection of lights, warmer pad, shelves, and seed starting stuff, etc. I have amassed.

I have been working on my winter garden since the 4th of July, and by now should have all the seeds I want, but dropped another $40 with JLHudson this weekend. All I wanted was some Portungese Kale, but.... When we had the bulk of our yard landscaped a few years ago, the landscaper used plants that were commonly available in local nurseries. Boring stuff. I went wild with ordering seeds for zone-appropriate replacement perennials that will attract pollinators.

When it comes to vegetables, I am a Zone 8b, Sunset 18, high desert container gardener.. I have SIPS (sub-irrigated planters) just waiting to revitalized and planted, and everything not in an Earthbox or facsimile, will actually be in a real pot or planter, not in a Homer bucket or a free pickle bucket!. I feel like I have arrived at last!

On to the actual garden report:

We've been eating young broccoli raab for a while, pulling and are now replacing the plants with Icicle radish seeds as we do. We have also been eating Fordhook chard, and I just made another succession planting of it, of the Orient Wonder beans, and the Golden Detroit beets.

A Little Prince eggplant seed has finally popped, Spigariello (Sprouting Broccoli, Seeds from Italy) is up, as is the Pixie Cabbage. They all live on the windowsill right now, but will eventually become Earthbox neighbors to the collards, which, along with the Lebanese marrow squash, is getting ready to take off.

My summer Roma is producing again, many varieties of micro dwarfs are in bloom and several compact dwarf seedlings are ready for their first transplant. Basil is busting out all over, tarragon and dill are sharing a big pot. Thyme, oregano, marjoram, and parsley have been all been moved to one large bowl and seem happy about it.

ETA, just took a walk around the garden and see that I forgot a box of Tom Thumb lettuce which has sprouted, Thumbelina carrots (new this year) which have not, and a Corneor di Capra pepper waiting for its final pot home.

So now that I have the vegetables in hand, I have been thinking about the various ways I can protect them through the winter beyond moving all of the planters onto the cement patio to take advantage of thermal mass.

I used to set up a portable hog panel hoop house in the backyard, but recently had a brainstorm about a way to put it on the patio, using cement blocks as kneewalls, and anchors, so I may well do that, and grow and sell some seedlings next year, to cover my gardening costs. If I don't put up the hoophouse, I will have a lot of seed trays to be protected, but I can always pull clear trashbags (Amazon) down over utility shelves of trays (of course, I would never let the plastic touch the leaves, as that transfers the outside temperature to them, a lesson learned the hard way.)

I also recently saw a raft of large translucent storage bins on sale at our local charity's last chance thrift shop. They will eventually crack and fracture and end up in the dump, but one could turn them upside down and give them a last life before they go, as a portable cold frame.

Alternately, binder clips are incredibly useful for making quick shelters and I could wrap my taller Wal-mart stack shelves with green house plastic and clip it together.

I also have a permanent "appliance" (Eliot Coleman's term for season extenders) built along the southern wall of the house, basically a 2' high box wrapped in a green tarp faced over with white lathe fencing. The inside frame has C-clamps bolted to it to hold PVC bent into hoops. Over the seasons, the hoops have alternately been covered with green house plastic, or shadecloth. It once held a half-dozen earthboxes, but since a family of formerly feral felines has moved in (and yes, have all been neutered and spayed), I gave it to them as their winter kitty condo.. In return they chase away rabbits and ground squirrels, so it's a fair trade.

If I were going to buy a portable green house, It would probably be a lean-to or the largest cloche style that I could find.