This invention relates to apparatus and methods for transplanting.
Containers are known for growing plants that are intended to be transplanted. Some of these containers are intended only for starting plants before they are transferred to a field. Others are intended to control the growth of the roots of the plants so that when they are transplanted, the roots will not interfere with other construction such as sidewalks or the like. Such containers frequently have parts that are designed to be easily removed and other parts remain with the plant after transplanting. Typically, the parts that remain with the plant are constructed to permit the plant roots to grow through the parts.
These containers and techniques for transplanting are not well adapted for one common purpose. That purpose is for a gardener that wishes to purchase a fully grown plant in a container from a nursery, greenhouse or the like and transplant it into the gardener's own container. For this purpose, the containers must be inexpensive to make and transport to the greenhouse or nursery and must be able to be quickly and easily assembled at the nursery or greenhouse. To be inexpensive, it must be constructed of inexpensive materials and must be shaped to permit easy stacking for shipment such as flat or with parts that can be packed one into the other for shipment. Moreover the assembled container must be sturdy enough to grow a mature plant and permit easy transplanting into the customers container.
Accordingly, it is an object of the invention to provide novel methods and containers for transplanting plants.
It is a further object of the invention to provide novel methods and apparatuses for transplanting a plant grown in one location such as a nursery or greenhouse into another container at another location.
It is a still further object of the invention to provide a transplanting container that is quick and easy to assemble at a greenhouse or nursery.
It is a still further object of the invention to provide a container for transplanting that is economical to make.
It is a still further object of the invention to provide a container for transplanting that is economical to ship.
It is a still further object of the invention to provide a method and apparatus that permits easy and quick transplanting from a container in which the plant has been grown to another container.
It is a still further object of the invention to provide a container for transplanting that is readily decomposable and biodegradable.
It is a still further object of the invention to provide a technique for transplanting that reduces non-biodegradable aspects of transplanting.
In accordance with the above and further objects of the invention, mature plants are transplanted to a selected container from a root retaining container and the surplus parts of the root retaining container are removed. The root retaining container includes a side wall and a bottom. The surplus parts are removed after the root retaining container has been placed in the selected container. In one embodiment, the root retaining container includes a strip having end sections that connect together to form a continuous side wall and separate to permit easy removal of the side wall. The bottom is removable from the side wall. The surplus parts are removed by disconnecting the end sections that are connected together and removing the side wall from the bottom after the root retaining container has been placed in the selected container. The mature plant is left in the selected container. In an alternative embodiment, at least some surplus parts of the container are formed of plant-compatible biodegradable material, whereby the side wall biodegrades without causing root girding. The biodegradable material does not degrade in less than 120 days and degrades in less than one season. In another embodiment, the bottom is detached from the side wall before the first roots are covered with growing media.
To reduce transportation costs, the component parts of a plurality of stackable first containers are shipped to a second location and assembled as needed. The surplus parts and root compatible parts may be folded to be flat for easy shipment. A plurality of surplus parts fit one into the other and root compatible parts fit one into the other in some embodiments.
This method and apparatus has several advantages, such as for example: (1) they permit the gardener to easily purchase a mature plant and easily transplant it into a selected container; (2) they are inexpensive; and (3) they use parts that can be easily folded or fitted one into the other for inexpensive shipping and yet be quickly assembled into containers by the green house or nursery.
The above noted and other features of the invention will be better understood from the following detailed description when considered together with the accompanying drawings in which:
In
Generally, this process is a method by which plants such as flower baskets may be grown and sold to a recipient to put in the recipient's container or containers (at times herein the recipient's container will refer to a selected container to indicate it is general to the transferring of mature plants from a container from which they are grown to another container and may not be necessarily the container of a purchaser from a greenhouse). Usually the mature plant is grown in the greenhouse root retaining container.
In the preferred embodiment of this invention, the “root compatible part” will be a root compatible bottom. In this specification, the language “root compatible bottom” means a bottom of a container that permits roots to grow through or beyond the bottom of the container. It would include a plant-compatible biodegradable bottom. “Plant-compatible biodegradable” in this specification means that the part degrades naturally at a rate that permits growth of the plant. For example, side walls of a container that degrade within 120 days may, under some circumstances and with some plants, avoid root girding by degrading sufficiently before additional space is needed for root growth so that the roots may grow beyond them. The root compatible parts of the container may be a root compatible side wall which is a side wall of the container that permits roots to grow through or beyond the side wall or may be a root compatible bottom which is the bottom of the container that permits roots to grow through or beyond the bottom of the container. Surplus parts of the root retaining container are the parts of the container that are not desirable in the finished plant nor serve a necessary function with the plant after the plant is transplanted into the recipient's container. Another form of root compatible side wall or bottom wall or compatible parts of the container in addition to plant-compatible biodegradable parts are parts such as a side wall or bottom that includes one or more opening or openings through which the roots may grow. This form of root compatible part is referred to from time to time in this specification as spatial root compatible parts or root compatible side walls or a root compatible bottom.
In
To mount a removable bottom 26 to the container 20, the side wall 24 include thickened portions 30A-30D. These portions 30A-30D are one-eighth of an inch thick in the preferred embodiment and have inverted L-shaped slots or notches 32A-32D cut into them. The container bottom 26 includes a spatial root compatible part 36 and a penetrable or a biodegradable part 38. A “penetrable part” in this specification means a part through which roots may grow because of their lack of strength. In the embodiment of
The spatial root compatible part 36 includes two sturdy cross members 40A and 40B which are cylindrical studs connected at their center and radiating outwardly to a length that is slightly greater than the diameter of the side wall 24 at the notches 32A-32D. The extending ends shown at 42A-42D are sized to fit within the notches 32A-32D and extend beyond them so that they form supporting points on the horizontal portions of the inverted L-shaped slots 32A-32D. To provide further support for the penetrable or biodegradable root compatible part 38, a web shaped configuration is connected to the supports 40A and 40B and consists of three concentric circles of wire or other material 44A, 44B and 44C spaced apart and mounted to the supports 40A and 40B. A plurality of wires such as those shown at 46A-46M radiate from the center to provide further support.
With this arrangement, the greenhouse operator or other grower may insert the spatial root compatible part 36 into the side wall 24 by moving the tubular stud supports or cross members 40A and 40B upwardly into the vertical portions of inverted L-shaped notches 32A-32D and then rotating it into the horizontal portions to hold the two together. The penetrable or biodegradable root compatible parts 38 may be placed on top within the side wall 24. Growing medium may then be inserted and a plant may be grown to maturity using the container 20 as a hanging basket. At maturity, it may be delivered to a recipient who may want to transfer it into a larger container of his or her own.
In the embodiment of
In
To form a side wall (actually a frustum of an eight sided pyramid), one end section 50D includes a tab 52 and the other end section 50E includes an opening 54 sized to receive the tab 52. The tab 52 cut into the section 50D and the opening 54 in the end section 50E form a fastener to fasten the ends of the strip 50 and form the frustum of a pyramid having eight sides. Of course other fasteners may be used but a tab and an opening are inexpensive and easy to use. With this fastener, the tab may be torn free while the ends 50D and 50E are together so the side wall becomes loose. It may then be removed easily from the recipient's container.
In the preferred embodiment shown in
In
The base section 60 of the root compatible bottom 26A serves as the bottom side of the container and is partly open but adapted to be closed by a penetrable or a biodegradable part 38 (shown in
The flaps 62A-62H sides have an altitude of generally two inches, the base section 60 is generally seven inches from lateral side to lateral side, thus fitting within the side wall 24A of the embodiment of
In
In
In
For this purpose, the recipient's container 80 which must be larger than the container 20 is filled with soil 84 to a level 86 of no more than five inches below the top of the pot to accommodate the container 20. The tab 52 of the container 20 is torn off as shown at 90 and the container 20 seated on top of the soil 84 in the container 80. The side wall 24A may then be easily removed as shown in
This method and apparatus has several advantages, such as for example: (1) they permit the gardener to easily purchase a mature plant and easily transplant it into a selected container; (2) they are inexpensive; and (3) they use parts that can be easily folder or fitted one into the other for inexpensive shipping and yet be quickly assembled into containers by the green house or nursery.
Although an embodiment of the invention has been described with some particularity, many modifications and variations in the preferred embodiment may be made without deviating from the invention. Accordingly, it is to be understood that, within the scope of the appended claims, the invention may be practiced as other than specifically described.
This application is a continuation-in-part application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/195,104 to Clark Plihal filed Aug. 1, 2005, for REMOVABLE BOTTOM TRANSPLANTING CONTAINER.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 11195104 | Aug 2005 | US |
Child | 12343084 | US |