What vegetables/ fruits can I plant contained by the nose-dive? I live on rental property (I'm in college), I hold a...

I live on rental property (I'm in college), I hold a large spinal column yard, but I can't verbs it up, perhaps I could use some sort of sizeable planter bins? Any advice?

I live within East Texas, it's hot, our winter seems to come behind, no real freezes too soon. Plenty of rainfall most of the time.

I've never gardened before, but I really would love to start off developing a green thumb. What can I begin to grow this subsequent fall semester?

Also, any guidance on a compost pile?
Yes, you can use planters for most vegetables. Carrots, cabbage, cauiflower, brocoli, peas, radishes, spinach and brussel sprouts are a few cool weather vegies you can plant.
Web survey compost for dozens of informative sites.


Grow what u get through the most..lettuce, carrot, peas, spinach, onions, spring onions, celery, mustard.
Fruits grow on trees and u could plant any of the fruit trees in fall over but u won't get fruit for two years at most minuscule.
For the compost, either u could buy a compost bin or a moment ago assign a partly sunny corner of ur garden to it. Just put in your veggie scraps, grass clippings, paper/ cardboard, egg shells, fallen leaves etc to the hoard. Tear up everything in smaller pieces. Ideally ur compost mountain should be at least 1m x 1m and 70% of the stuff should be brown stuff or dry stuff. Only 30% of the stuff should be green stuff. But this ratio could be complicated to achieve as we repeatedly have more greens than browns. Keep it moist and cover your mass with a feeble carpet or tarpauline to keep hold of the rain out. turn your mountain with a fork every daytime or two to make sure it is aerated. Let the worms do the rest. The smaller the pile, the longer it takes to clear the compost because smaller heaps don't get heated up approaching the bigger ones that get steaming hot inside.
Best of luck next to ur venture.
Answers:    If you have sunny window, you can grow almost anything. Use a five gallon container to grow a tomato plant. Lettuce and onions can be grown in shallower containers.