Small White Plastic Plant Saucer
That Tray Situation: A Survey for Plant People
We want to know what you actually do with these things. Your answers shape better designs. No fluff. Just real talk about saucers, spills, and plant chaos.
- Do you own multiple sizes or stick to one?
- Do you use them indoors only or brave the outdoors?
- Have you ever overwatered and flooded the tray?
- Do long roots ever escape into the water?
- Have you tried them with non-flower plants?
- Do drainage holes matter to you or do you DIY?
- How important is material toughness versus looks?
- Would you paint or decorate yours?
Every question reveals what makers get wrong. Your voice fixes that.
Tricks Nobody Tells You
These double as humidity trays for tropical plants. Group several together under a pebble layer. Instant microclimate.
Flip one upside down to create a raised platform. Keeps small pots from sitting in runoff.
Compared to Lechuza self-watering systems, these simpler trays demand more attention but cost far less.
Unlike Fiskars resin saucers, many generic versions stack tighter for storage. Verify lip height before buying.
Use under seedling trays to catch nutrient solution. Prevents bench stains in greenhouse setups.
Place under propagation boxes. Catches the dribble from root cuttings.
Some gardeners use them as sorting trays for bulbs before planting. Seasonal multitasking.
Specific details vary by brand. Always verify dimensions and material grade on the actual listing.
