Vacation Watering Tip for Flower Pots & Containers

Use this easy vacation watering tip to keep your potted plants happy while you’re away for up to a week – no need to ask anyone to water.

Potted plants on farmhouse porch

If there’s one issue most gardeners deal with, it’s vacation watering – how to keep pots of flowers and plants watered during a vacation.

During the summer flowering pots and planted containers can dry out in a single hot day, depending on their size – how do you take care of them during weekend getaways or week long vacation?

Do you hire a house sitter for just a few days? Ask a neighbor? Give up and let the plants die?

If you grow flowers, vegetables or herbs in pots, you know that even a weekend without water in the summer heat can stunt growth and even kill plants.

But asking someone to water your plants every time you go away can become burdensome (for both of you!).

And hiring for a few days isn’t always an option. (Besides, when was the last time a kid knew how to water plants long enough to soak them?)

This was my dilemma a few years ago as we were heading out for a week of camping.

So I thought about how I water my seedlings from the bottom and realized the same concept should work with pots, too, just on a larger scale.

My solution?

Buy a kiddie pool to hold the pots and then fill the pool with water!

planted containers in kiddie pool up close

And it worked perfectly!

I’ve used this method now for many years and I’ve been really happy with the results. The plants stay alive (some even thrive because they were needing a good summertime soak), and I don’t have to bug someone to water them on smaller trips.

When we’ve been gone for a week in hot summer I will ask someone to come and water the bigger pots that don’t fit and refill the pool at the 3-4 day mark.

The water does evaporate on 80 and 90 degree days and will need to be refilled. But if the weather will be cooler, you may not need anyone to stop by.

kiddie pool full of plants with trailing plants over the edge

How to Use a Kiddie Pool for Vacation Watering

Add The Planted Containers

  1. Place any hanging pots and all the smallest pots in the pool. When placing the hanging pots, let the trailing plants hang over the edge and arrange them on the other pots, as needed. Basically, don’t let the trailers sit in the water.
  2. Fill in any extra openings with medium-sized pots. It’s okay if they are tilted a bit to fit – just as long as the bottom of the pots will get water, it’s good.
  3. Larger pots can last a couple days between watering, so if you don’t want to invest in a lot of kiddie pools, just water them well move them to shadier spots. OR buy plastic saucers to fit under them and fill those with water.
filling kiddie pool with pots and water

Add The Water

Then it’s just a matter of filling the pool to the top with water.

That’s a lot easier than trying to find someone to water, isn’t it?

How long does this tip work?

I’ve found that about five days is best (though you can stretch it to seven) because some of the plants don’t like being waterlogged and may look a little yellow when you return.

If that happens, I trim them up if needed and they perk back up in about a week. In my book that’s still better than losing the plant to not enough water.

A 3 day weekend trip is just about the perfect amount of time – you will come back to plants that look as healthy as when you left.

In fact, if I haven’t been consistent in watering (what- this surprises you?) leading up to the time away, the plants may even look better.

flowering pots on deck

All the more reason to schedule a fun trip, I say.

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20 Comments

  1. I plan to use this idea as I will be gone for two weeks this summer and live in south Florida. How far up the sides of the pot should the water come when filling the pool?

    1. I’d fill it all the way up the sides and then have someone check it once after about a week to make sure it isn’t dry. Two weeks is a long time and some of the plants may be a bit waterlogged at the end, but they should perk up after you get back and remove them. For most plants it’s better than drying out that long, but be aware of that.

  2. I absolutely love cherries and my favorite is Mt Rainer cherries. We just bought some at our local grocery store. They aren’t here long so we buy them up. I would love to have a tree. Enjoy them!!

    Thank you for the recipes and the watering tip. I always have problems with watering when we are gone, so this is helpful.

    Colleen

    1. Yes, the cherry “season” of 2-3 weeks (so short!) is very exciting around here – it’s always what we can pick before the birds get them, lol.

      I’m glad this tip is helpful to you – it was definitely a lightbulb moment for me. šŸ™‚

  3. Your idea is great. I have another suggestion to add to you’re awesome idea. Leave a hose in the pool and put a timer on your water faucet and set timer to come on every five days for enough time to half fill the pool. The timer can also be set to come on anywhere from every day to every 7 days.

    1. Thank you, Toni! That is a good idea – you’d just have to make sure you test it to know how much water in the amount of time so you don’t have an overflowing pool, lol.

  4. It might be a good idea to throw a “dunks” disc into that pool to prevent it from incubating a bunch of mosquitos in addition to watering your plants.

  5. I almost missed this week;) glad I got my act together and am now looking forward to seeing everyone’s progress.

    Great watering idea. And the tomato post was hysterical. Oh my, I can’t imagine!

  6. That is such a great idea and darn it if I didn’t give away a kiddie pool to the neighbors šŸ™ Got it for our dog and it freaked her out so I passed it along, never considering another use for it.

    Good lesson for me and great idea from you.

  7. My husband collects rain water in large plastic barrels. He attached a spigot to the bottom so we us a soaker hose and gravity from the pressure of water in a full barrel for our raised beds. Quite a lot of set up, but works well for.
    I love your idea for the pots. (Bonus: the dog can use the kiddie pool when we are home and it’s hot out.)

  8. What a great idea! I am taking the kids to see my grandma and even though my husband will be staying behind he will be too busy with work to worry about my plants.

  9. I thought that was an interesting concept of watering the plants from the bottom. Here at the apartment complex where I live, they use a sprinkler system for the plants…BUT just recently installed a system in some areas where the plants are watered from an underground system…and they are really lush and green. So it must be working šŸ™‚ šŸ™‚ šŸ™‚

    I don’t have a garden to link up with here…but I do love your posts. I’m participating in all sorts of fun tea parties today..the kind where you display actual tea sets etc…It’s so much fun.

    Have a great Tuesday. Love and hugs from Oregon, Heather šŸ™‚