The instructions that come with the thing talk about growing different things in the little, space-wasting containers.
2 Yes, you can. I bought one of these, thinking it would be fun to have a little indoor garden. Maggo is right - they are not only space wasting, but money wasting.
The amount of produce one garden can grow at a time is not even enough for a small salad. How they hype that into enough salad to feed a family of four (the claims on their site and the packaging), I cannot even imagine. Unless it's a family that loathes salad, and they each want a couple of small leaves, so they can say "There, I ate my veggies!"
But for anyone who really likes salad - what a disappointment this was.
3 This is not spam, and sorry to hear that it didn't produce enough salad for a family of four. We have a 6-pod Aerogarden, and we just finished growing a crop of herbs. The amount our garden produced was fantasic, and it was hard to keep up with it and harvest all we could.
We've tried to grow outdoors, but no matter what we do, the slugs always get to to it first, so we thought we'd try an Aerogarden. We are a family of two, so I'd like to try lettuce, but I also don't want to give up my basil, oregano, and thyme. The manual says you either have to grow herbs, or lettuce, or one of the other types of plants, and the garden itself has specific settings depending on what you're growing (as well as the nutrients, which are supposed to be geared toward lettuce, or herbs, or etc.).
I'm just wondering how specific they really are, or if that's just marketing hype from Aerogarden. I'm looking into reusing the seed pods that came with it, and putting my own seeds in there, to reduce waste and save money.
We have a 6-pod Aerogarden, and we just finished growing a crop of herbs. The amount our garden produced was fantasic, and it was hard to keep up with it and harvest all we could. We've tried to grow outdoors, but no matter what we do, the slugs always get to to it first, so we thought we'd try an Aerogarden.
We are a family of two, so I'd like to try lettuce, but I also don't want to give up my basil, oregano, and thyme. The manual says you either have to grow herbs, or lettuce, or one of the other types of plants, and the garden itself has specific settings depending on what you're growing (as well as the nutrients, which are supposed to be geared toward lettuce, or herbs, or etc.). I'm just wondering how specific they really are, or if that's just marketing hype from Aerogarden.
I'm looking into reusing the seed pods that came with it, and putting my own seeds in there, to reduce waste and save money.
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.