Sub-irrigated planter (SIP) is a generic name for a special type of planting box used in container gardening and commercial landscaping. A SIP is any method of watering plants where the water is introduced from the bottom, allowing the water to soak upwards to the plant through capillary action. It is possible to automate the watering and thus SIPs are popular with professional landscapers in buildings or urban settings. SIPs are available as products, under brand names such as Planter Technology (commercial) and EarthBox (consumer), Ollie Plant Sipper (consumer), Octopot (consumer), The Refuge Garden (consumer/commercial) or as do-it-yourself projects made from plastic buckets and boxes.
One of the disadvantages of closed systems like Earth Boxes and SIPs is that soluble salts cannot be flushed into the lower soil profile and build up over time.
See also
- Subirrigation
Notes
External links
- AlboPepper: SIPs (Sub-Irrigated Planters)
- Global Buckets: A nonprofit organization using sub-irrigated planters to reduce global hunger.
- Improved Alaska Grow Bucket DIY single bucket Sub-Irrigated Planter.
- Advantages of Sub-Irrigated Planters
- Earthtainer Open-SourceSub-Irrigated Planter Design
- How to make a self-watering planter for under $10
- High Altitude Gardening â" SIPping
- Blake Whisenant, Inventor of the Earthbox, demonstrates how it works