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expired Posted by TattyBear | Staff • Oct 10, 2024
expired Posted by TattyBear | Staff • Oct 10, 2024

4'8" x 6'5" Miracle Grow PVC Mini Walk-in Greenhouse

$33

$55

40% off
Amazon
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Deal Details
Amazon has Miracle-Gro 4'8" x 29" x 6'5" All-Season Mini Walk-in Greenhouse w/ 4 Wire Shelves (70526) for $33. Shipping is free w/ Prime or on $35+.

Home Depot has Miracle-Gro 4'8" x 29" x 6'5" All-Season Mini Walk-in Greenhouse w/ 4 Wire Shelves (70526) for $33. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Deal Hunter TattyBear for finding this deal.

Features:
  • 4'8" x 29" x 6'5" unit is ideal for indoor or outdoor use to start seedlings early or extend your growing season and includes 4 removable sturdy wire mesh shelves to maximize space
  • Made of high-grade 5/8" tubular steel with a premium powder coat finish that resists chipping, peeling, rust, and corrosion for long-lasting use
  • Plants receive a maximum amount of light even in cooler months, and the double-zipper door allows for easy access to plants

Editor's Notes

Written by powerfuldoppler | Staff
  • About this deal:
    • This price is $21.99 lower (40% savings) than the list price of $54.99
  • About this product:
    • Rating of 4 from over 65 customer reviews.
  • About this store:

Original Post

Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Amazon has Miracle-Gro 4'8" x 29" x 6'5" All-Season Mini Walk-in Greenhouse w/ 4 Wire Shelves (70526) for $33. Shipping is free w/ Prime or on $35+.

Home Depot has Miracle-Gro 4'8" x 29" x 6'5" All-Season Mini Walk-in Greenhouse w/ 4 Wire Shelves (70526) for $33. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Deal Hunter TattyBear for finding this deal.

Features:
  • 4'8" x 29" x 6'5" unit is ideal for indoor or outdoor use to start seedlings early or extend your growing season and includes 4 removable sturdy wire mesh shelves to maximize space
  • Made of high-grade 5/8" tubular steel with a premium powder coat finish that resists chipping, peeling, rust, and corrosion for long-lasting use
  • Plants receive a maximum amount of light even in cooler months, and the double-zipper door allows for easy access to plants

Editor's Notes

Written by powerfuldoppler | Staff
  • About this deal:
    • This price is $21.99 lower (40% savings) than the list price of $54.99
  • About this product:
    • Rating of 4 from over 65 customer reviews.
  • About this store:

Original Post

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Deal Score
+24
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Top Comments

I've got this or one just like it. I've had it for two seasons. I use it in December/January to start tomatoes and peppers and such for the spring garden. I set it up on a south facing deck against my house. It has held up well, but is very light weight, and somewhat flimsy, but fine for what it is. It will blow away and must be weighted down. I lay boards across the bottom and fill a small trash can with water. In that, I put an aquarium heater, that keeps it weighted down and the warm water provides moist air to seedlings. If you have a sunny 50 degree winter day, like we often do in Northwest Florida, it can overheat. I've cooked seedlings because I forgot to open it up, and the inside temps got to over 100 degrees. I start putting tomatoes in the ground around February and then I just use it to store seedlings at night, until danger of frost has passed.
Thanks for the aquarium heater idea. 🍅

18 Comments

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Oct 11, 2024
1,178 Posts
Joined Aug 2014
Oct 11, 2024
Frankie251
Oct 11, 2024
1,178 Posts

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I've got this or one just like it. I've had it for two seasons. I use it in December/January to start tomatoes and peppers and such for the spring garden. I set it up on a south facing deck against my house. It has held up well, but is very light weight, and somewhat flimsy, but fine for what it is. It will blow away and must be weighted down. I lay boards across the bottom and fill a small trash can with water. In that, I put an aquarium heater, that keeps it weighted down and the warm water provides moist air to seedlings. If you have a sunny 50 degree winter day, like we often do in Northwest Florida, it can overheat. I've cooked seedlings because I forgot to open it up, and the inside temps got to over 100 degrees. I start putting tomatoes in the ground around February and then I just use it to store seedlings at night, until danger of frost has passed.
Last edited by Frankie251 October 11, 2024 at 04:42 AM.
1
Oct 11, 2024
142 Posts
Joined Oct 2018
Oct 11, 2024
MerryFriction1635
Oct 11, 2024
142 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank MerryFriction1635

Quote from Frankie251 :
I've got this or one just like it. I've had it for two seasons. I use it in December/January to start tomatoes and peppers and such for the spring garden. I set it up on a south facing deck against my house. It has held up well, but is very light weight, and somewhat flimsy, but fine for what it is. It will blow away and must be weighted down. I lay boards across the bottom and fill a small trash can with water. In that, I put an aquarium heater, that keeps it weighted down and the warm water provides moist air to seedlings. If you have a sunny 50 degree winter day, like we often do in Northwest Florida, it can overheat. I've cooked seedlings because I forgot to open it up, and the inside temps got to over 100 degrees. I start putting tomatoes in the ground around February and then I just use it to store seedlings at night, until danger of frost has passed.
Thanks for the aquarium heater idea. 🍅
1
Oct 11, 2024
304 Posts
Joined Dec 2011
Oct 11, 2024
collegebudget
Oct 11, 2024
304 Posts
Does this have any practical purpose in the Northeast? (Boston area)
Oct 11, 2024
230 Posts
Joined Apr 2023
Oct 11, 2024
SkillfulHeart577
Oct 11, 2024
230 Posts
Quote from collegebudget :
Does this have any practical purpose in the Northeast? (Boston area)
Tropical plants that love moisture. Just being outside might not be enough or if you can't water them often enough. My wife has a few tropicals and they love it outside in the summer but need to be watered a lot. I imagine this would help them thrive more but we live in an apartment currently so we don't have that choice. I think that will be ineffective in winter here, you'd have to heat it quite a bit and the cost then probably outweighs the benfits.
Oct 11, 2024
428 Posts
Joined Oct 2011
Oct 11, 2024
bgtimber75
Oct 11, 2024
428 Posts
Quote from collegebudget :
Does this have any practical purpose in the Northeast? (Boston area)
No! It's so thin that on cold nights the temp will be what it is outside. Even using it in early spring is pointless with the winds you'll be constantly keeping an eye on it to blow away and the week early you might be able to put out stuff in it won't be worth the hassle.
1
3
Oct 11, 2024
145 Posts
Joined Apr 2009
Oct 11, 2024
striped
Oct 11, 2024
145 Posts
Quote from collegebudget :
Does this have any practical purpose in the Northeast? (Boston area)
Why not? I buy tomato seedlings in McCue's Garden Center in Billerica in April and let them mature for a month in a greenhouse like this before replanting. You can start your seeds as well.
You will need to put it away for the winter though.
Oct 11, 2024
214 Posts
Joined Jun 2005
Oct 11, 2024
ThatGuy3141
Oct 11, 2024
214 Posts
The yard guys at my townhome always blow moldy grass clippings all over my planter garden, every year. I'm hoping to use this next year to keep my plants from getting infected, ruining my harvest. This year I lost almost all of my tomatoes and a lot of my cucumbers.
1
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Oct 11, 2024
2,110 Posts
Joined Jul 2009
Oct 11, 2024
FGBallz
Oct 11, 2024
2,110 Posts
I live in the SouthWest. This is perfect to protect my succulents during the short time we actually drop to freezing over "winter".
Oct 11, 2024
56 Posts
Joined Dec 2019
Oct 11, 2024
TeamHedricksRacing
Oct 11, 2024
56 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank TeamHedricksRacing

I live in the dfw area and tried this a couple of years ago to keep some plants and citrus trees alive during the winter. I was planning on using it as a temporary green house and take it down and store it in the spring. Long story short, it failed.

I had a bigger one and it did a good job with heating up during the daytime but it did not hold any heat at night. I did not want to put a space heater in it so I tried milk jugs that were filled with water and painted black and five gal. buckets of hot water to try to keep heat in it at night. I also lined the roof and sides with bubble wrap to help insulate it. My plants died from using it without a heater. When I took it apart in the spring, all of the thin metal poles had surface rust, some started rusting through.
1
Oct 12, 2024
1,460 Posts
Joined Mar 2009
Oct 12, 2024
area201
Oct 12, 2024
1,460 Posts
Quote from collegebudget :
Does this have any practical purpose in the Northeast? (Boston area)
Cycle and other small things winter storage
Oct 12, 2024
2,856 Posts
Joined Sep 2008
Oct 12, 2024
ChiefAlchemist
Oct 12, 2024
2,856 Posts
Quote from Frankie251 :
I've got this or one just like it. I've had it for two seasons. I use it in December/January to start tomatoes and peppers and such for the spring garden. I set it up on a south facing deck against my house. It has held up well, but is very light weight, and somewhat flimsy, but fine for what it is. It will blow away and must be weighted down. I lay boards across the bottom and fill a small trash can with water. In that, I put an aquarium heater, that keeps it weighted down and the warm water provides moist air to seedlings. If you have a sunny 50 degree winter day, like we often do in Northwest Florida, it can overheat. I've cooked seedlings because I forgot to open it up, and the inside temps got to over 100 degrees. I start putting tomatoes in the ground around February and then I just use it to store seedlings at night, until danger of frost has passed.
Kudos on the heater idea.
Oct 12, 2024
2,856 Posts
Joined Sep 2008
Oct 12, 2024
ChiefAlchemist
Oct 12, 2024
2,856 Posts
Quote from MerryFriction1635 :
Thanks for the aquarium heater idea. 🍅
You probably won't get year round use unless you heat it and that would be expensive. But starting the Spring early and going later in the Fall? Worth a shot. It'll still need heat but less so.
Oct 12, 2024
2,856 Posts
Joined Sep 2008
Oct 12, 2024
ChiefAlchemist
Oct 12, 2024
2,856 Posts
The reg price at HD is $43 so this is only $10 off. Solid deal but not slick tbh
Oct 12, 2024
1,178 Posts
Joined Aug 2014
Oct 12, 2024
Frankie251
Oct 12, 2024
1,178 Posts
Quote from MerryFriction1635 :
Thanks for the aquarium heater idea. 🍅
I stole it from YouTube. 😁

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Oct 12, 2024
1,178 Posts
Joined Aug 2014
Oct 12, 2024
Frankie251
Oct 12, 2024
1,178 Posts
Quote from ChiefAlchemist :
You probably won't get year round use unless you heat it and that would be expensive. But starting the Spring early and going later in the Fall? Worth a shot. It'll still need heat but less so.
I only use mine for seed starting in January through early spring. Once we hit April, in my area, the greenhouse is too hot for most seeds. After April, I'm trying to keep seedlings cool to get good germination. From what I understand, most veggies will germinate best with a soil temp around 75. I've never tried to take the plastic off and put a shade cloth over the frame, but that might work when it's hot and seed trays need to be cooler.

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