Hanging basket

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Hanging basket in Scarva, County Down, Northern Ireland
Thornbury, England

A hanging basket is a suspended container used for growing decorative plants. Typically they are hung from buildings, where garden space is at a premium, and from street furniture for environmental enhancement. They may also be suspended from free standing frames sometimes called hanging basket trees. One type of hanging basket is the inverted planter where plants are grown in an upside down pot and are watered from the top.

Structure

Hanging baskets are normally made from

bedding plants and may include geraniums, fuchsia, and trailing plants around the edges such as lobelia.[2][3][4]

Criticism

Safety concerns have been raised over hanging baskets. In February 2004, Suffolk County Council ruled there was a risk that baskets, part of the annual summer floral displays in Bury St Edmunds, could fall from lampposts and injure the public. After an outcry this decision was reversed the following month.[5] Because of hosepipe bans due to drought, local authorities in South East England reduced the number of hanging baskets in public displays in spring 2006.[6]

References

  1. ^ "Hanging baskets for Mother's Day", Elspeth Thompson, The Daily Telegraph, 26 February 2008
  2. ^
    BBC.co.uk
    , retrieved 24 February 2008
  3. BBC.co.uk
    , retrieved 26 February 2008
  4. ^ "Hanging Basket Fuchsias" Archived 2012-10-22 at the Wayback Machine, Los Angeles Times, April 25, 1948
  5. ^ "Town lifts hanging basket 'ban'", BBC News, 9 March 2004
  6. ^ "Drought threatens death of the hanging basket", The Daily Telegraph, David Derbyshire and Rebekah Curtis, 25 March 2006

External links

Media related to Hanging baskets at Wikimedia Commons