scrubjayspeaks: Bo from Spirited Away in mouse form, attempting to knit (crafting)
scrubjayspeaks ([personal profile] scrubjayspeaks) wrote2025-03-08 01:29 pm
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Making Terrariums in Jars

[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith has been posting about making terrariums and did a step-by-step of creating one in a spice jar. I was very inspired by this, and I wanted to take advantage of it being moss season here. In the spirit of spreading the inspiration, here's my process post too.

Items arranged on a black plastic surface: a plastic container with mounds of dirt, leaves, and moss, a couple long sticks with green lichen, a shorter stick, a trowel, and a pair of pruning shears.

I have an empty spice jar, complete with the snap-on shaker top and a lid that doesn't actually belong to it. This one had a plastic-y sticker for the label, which came off easily and left a minimum of adhesive residue. Most of the spice jars I have used papery labels, which are always such a pain to clean off.

A closeup of the contents of the plastic container, showing decaying leaves, a mound of dirt, and several chunks of moss or plant attached to dirt.

Using a small transplanting trowel, I gathered up materials from around the place. I got some soil from gopher mounds and some worm castings, as well as some soil from under leaf layers around the cottonwood trees. I got some whole, decaying leaves as well. I found sticks and bark with lichens, also from the cottonwoods. Then from around the horse corrals, where the fencing allows condensation to collect more consistently than we get rain, I got some pads of moss, as well as a couple of small, low-growing plants.

I assembled it on the top of the trash can. Conveniently located, tall enough to spare my back, close enough to flat for a working surface.

A tall, cylindrical spice jar with a layer of fine gravel in the bottom.

For the gravel drainage layer, I used some of the assorted top dressing I've saved from repotting succulents. (Also, just for my own idle amusement, I tossed in a few pearls of the hail that's still hanging around in the shady areas after the freak hailstorm we had this week.) I topped that with leaves to isolate it. For the soil layer, I used a thicker, less rotted stick to pack it down.

The gravel layer seemed very thin when I was making it, but the final assembly seems to have a much thicker gravel-dirt base layer than I was aiming for. Possibly I wasn't looking at it from the side as much as I should have, as opposed to from the top. It's a little hard to judge when working in a small container like this, but we'll call that a learning lesson.

The same jar, now with a layer of dirt then moss, topped with several bits of stick slanted against the inside walls.

Then I arranged the fancy bits: Some patches of moss and one of the tiny plants, gently pressed into the base materials. Then some bits of lichen branch, snapped down to size.

A wider, shorter jar, with a gravel layer down and several torn leaves placed on top.

At this point, I realized I had gathered plenty more materials than I needed. Since that was the most time-consuming part (wow, a whole five minutes, probably XD), it seemed a shame not to make more use of them. So I tracked down another jar. Again, I didn't want to mess around with the paper labels, so I opted for a larger jam jar instead. It ended up with a lot of adhesive, though, so I scrubbed it down with a little 99% IPA to lift that. No shaker top, but oh well.

Same process here. I found some larger leaves to match the wider diameter, but other than that, it was all the same batch of materials. This one got the other small plant. I used the pruning shears to cut bits of the thicker stick for this one.

A fluffy, longhair grey cat walking away from the viewer down a paved patio bordered by grass.

A passing inspection by the neighbor's cat! Must be on important cat business, since he didn't stop for scritches.

An overhead view of both jars, side by side, showing the crossed stick bits and some moss.

Back in the kitchen, here's a better view of the inside. I used a damp cotton bud to swab dirt smudges off the inside walls just to tidy things up. The lids are on loosely while I get a sense of how fast moisture dissipates. I put one in my bedroom and one in the office. Indirect light of varying degrees, so we'll see if one spot proves more favorable.

The jars, still side by side, now with their lids on, seen from the side to show the layered contents.
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)

Thoughts

[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith 2025-03-09 11:23 am (UTC)(link)
>>This one had a plastic-y sticker for the label, which came off easily and left a minimum of adhesive residue. Most of the spice jars I have used papery labels, which are always such a pain to clean off.<<

Yeah, mine had a plastic sticker too. It left some residue, but I was able to scrub off the glue. After using a wet soapy dish sponge, I got the rest off with a dry sponge.

>>The gravel layer seemed very thin when I was making it, but the final assembly seems to have a much thicker gravel-dirt base layer than I was aiming for.<<

Yeah, the substrate is supposed to be about 1/3 the volume of the terrarium, but much depends on A) the shape of the container and B) what you want to grow. Obviously lichens don't really need much soil layer and moss will be happy with a thin layer.

>>At this point, I realized I had gathered plenty more materials than I needed. <<

That's typical. Better too much than too little, unless you have expensive ingredients.
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)

Re: Thoughts

[personal profile] ysabetwordsmith 2025-03-09 06:51 pm (UTC)(link)
If you want height, look for cheap bottles of vinegar or olive oil. The better quality levels usually have a brown or green tint, but the cheap ones are almost always clear. These bottles are often relatively tall and narrow, sometimes square.
kellan_the_tabby: My face, reflected in a round mirror I'm holding up; the rest of the image is the side of my head, hair shorn short. (Default)

[personal profile] kellan_the_tabby 2025-03-17 12:25 am (UTC)(link)
I'm looking forward to hearing how they do!
kellan_the_tabby: My face, reflected in a round mirror I'm holding up; the rest of the image is the side of my head, hair shorn short. (Default)

[personal profile] kellan_the_tabby 2025-03-23 09:14 pm (UTC)(link)
truth! yeah, that kind of 'sit back & see' experiment is kinda fun, isn't it?