In gardens and on balconies around the world, hanging baskets and container plants offer vibrant splashes of life suspended in mid-air. Yet behind the riot of petunias, lobelias, and trailing fuchsias lies a critical horticultural oversight: most are being watered incorrectly—and science is beginning to show the consequences.
At the root of the problem—literally—is a widespread reliance on surface watering. Gardeners, whether through haste or habit, often sprinkle water across the top of the soil, believing a quick drench will suffice. However, new insights from plant physiology and soil science suggest that this approach creates shallow hydration zones, encouraging roots to grow upwards toward fleeting moisture. This not only disrupts natural root development but also makes plants vulnerable to temperature extremes and drought stress.
Shallow Water, Shallow Roots

Containers, unlike garden beds, are closed systems with limited volume. Once water drains from the bottom, there is no groundwater to draw upon. In well-intentioned attempts to hydrate, many gardeners water too little or too quickly—often before the soil has absorbed anything beyond the top inch.
“The top few centimetres of compost may appear wet, but deeper down the root ball could be bone dry,” says Dr. Lydia Farren, a plant ecologist at the University of Sheffield. “This tricks both gardener and plant—roots begin clustering at the surface, creating a fragile and inefficient structure.”
Surface-rooted plants in containers dry out faster and become dependent on constant watering. In heatwaves or windy conditions, their resilience collapses.
The Role of Soil Physics
Compost in containers tends to be lightweight, often peat-free, and can become hydrophobic when dry—actively repelling water. This adds complexity to proper irrigation. Water poured too quickly pools and runs off the sides or straight through without moistening the entire medium.
Capillary action, the force that moves water through soil pores, is limited in containers by their vertical dimensions. Unlike open ground, there’s no deep reservoir for water to wick upwards from.
Engineering a Better Watering Regime
Modern horticulture has turned to water-retaining products to counter these structural shortcomings. Chief among them are hydrogels—crosslinked polymers capable of absorbing hundreds of times their weight in water. When mixed into potting compost, they act as tiny reservoirs.
These hydrogels swell upon contact with water, storing moisture and releasing it slowly as the surrounding soil dries out. This buffering effect stabilises water availability, allowing roots to grow deeper and access moisture more evenly distributed through the root zone.
“Think of them as slow-release water capsules,” explains Dr. Anika Thorne, a soil chemist at Kew Gardens. “They reduce watering frequency by maintaining moisture where roots need it—below the surface.”
Other innovations include wetting agents, which improve water penetration in dry soils, and mulches like coir or bark chips that reduce surface evaporation.
A Call for Conscious Watering
The science is clear: watering from the surface may keep plants alive, but it rarely helps them thrive. Gardeners must reframe their approach—from reacting to dry surfaces to proactively ensuring full saturation. One effective method is the “double soak” technique: water once, wait 10–15 minutes, then water again to allow the compost to fully absorb moisture.
Additionally, periodically checking the weight of a container or inserting a moisture probe can give a more accurate picture of what’s happening below ground.
As climate volatility increases and water becomes an ever-more precious resource, cultivating efficient watering habits is not just good gardening—it’s ecological stewardship. In the hanging worlds of baskets and pots, the roots of resilience lie deeper than we think.
*References:
- Farren, L., et al. “Root Morphology and Water Uptake in Confined Growing Media.” Journal of Plant Sciences (2023).
- Thorne, A., “Hydrogels in Horticulture: Mechanisms and Applications.” Royal Botanic Research (2024).*