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Growing Vegetables in Plastic Crates: A Complete Guide

June 13, 2026 — Lê Văn Thăng

Grow vegetables in plastic crates: choosing a food-safe HDPE/PP crate, drainage, growing medium, sowing, watering, feeding, pests and best crops.

Growing Vegetables in Plastic Crates: A Complete Guide

Reviewed and updated by ICD - Week 24/2026

Quick summary:

  • Growing vegetables in plastic crates saves space, makes pest control easy, cuts cost and reuses old crates.
  • Preparation: choose a food-safe HDPE or PP crate 20-30 cm deep, drill 6-8 drainage holes, and mix a loose, nutrient-rich growing medium.
  • Technique: soak and pre-germinate seeds, sow or transplant, water morning and evening, feed organic fertilizer every 10-15 days, and use a garlic-chili-ginger spray for pests.
  • Best crops: leafy greens (lettuce, mustard greens, water spinach) in 20-50 L crates; fruiting and climbing plants in larger 100-200 L bins.

Why grow vegetables in plastic crates?

Growing vegetables in plastic crates is an ideal solution for gardeners in cities or with limited space. Crates make the most of a balcony or rooftop and offer real advantages: they save space (easy to arrange, move and stack), make control easy (limiting pest spread and letting you watch each plant), keep cost low (a low initial outlay, and you can reuse old paint or water crates), and are eco-friendly (reusing plastic cuts waste and greens your space). Use a food-safe plastic crate made of virgin HDPE or PP so no chemicals leach into the soil.

Preparation before planting

This step decides the garden’s success.

  • Choosing the crate: pick a durable crate that handles sun and rain, 20-30 cm deep for good root growth. For leafy greens, a rectangular 20-50 L crate suits; for climbing or fruiting plants needing more soil, a 100-200 L bin lets roots grow strong and store more water and nutrients. Prefer virgin HDPE or PP - safe, strong and odorless.
  • Seeds: buy quality seed and soak in warm water (2 parts boiling to 3 parts cold) for 2-5 hours, then incubate in a warm damp cloth for 6-12 hours to lift germination to 80-90%.
  • Growing medium: loose, moisture-retaining and nutrient-rich. A good mix is 50% loam, 30% coir/rice husk and 20% worm castings or compost. Worm castings both feed and improve the soil.
  • Drainage: drill 6-8 holes (0.5-1 cm) in the base to avoid waterlogging, and lay a plastic or wire mesh over them so they do not clog. For self-watering, set 2-3 perforated bottles as a small reservoir so plants do not dry out when you are busy.

Planting steps

  • Step 1 - Sow or transplant: scatter seed evenly (not too dense), cover with 0.5-1 cm of soil, mist, and cover with straw or thin cloth to keep moisture. For seedlings, dig a small hole, set the plant, firm the base and water at once.
  • Step 2 - Water sensibly: mist right after sowing or transplanting, in early morning or cool evening, not at midday. Water twice a day in the dry season, sparingly in the rainy season to avoid waterlogging. Rice-rinse water and tea/coffee grounds add natural nutrients.
  • Step 3 - Feed: after 2-3 weeks, add organic or foliar fertilizer every 10-15 days, dissolved in water or spread thinly on the soil.
  • Step 4 - Pest control: use a garlic-chili-ginger spray (100 g each blended in 1 L water, diluted 1:10) or a biological pesticide, and check plants regularly.

Best vegetables for crates

Leafy greens (lettuce, mustard greens, water spinach, herbs) grow fast in shallow 20-50 L crates and are the easiest to start with. Root crops (radish, carrot) need 25-30 cm depth. Fruiting and climbing plants (tomato, cucumber, beans) need a larger 100-200 L bin and a support frame. Reconditioning the soil with fresh compost after every 2 crops keeps yields up.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Which crate material is safe for growing food?

Virgin HDPE or PP - they are odorless, durable and do not leach chemicals into the soil, unlike cheap recycled plastic.

How deep should the crate be?

20-30 cm for leafy greens and roots; 100-200 L bins for fruiting or climbing plants that need more soil.

How many drainage holes do I need?

6-8 holes of 0.5-1 cm in the base, with a mesh over them to stop clogging.

How do I control pests without chemicals?

A garlic-chili-ginger spray (100 g each in 1 L water, diluted 1:10) or a biological pesticide, with regular inspection.

Contact ICD Viet Nam

For food-safe HDPE/PP crates for home growing, contact our team for a quote.


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