Heather
Reviewed in the United States on September 1, 2024
Nice product. Works great for my Hen and Chicken plants. My only complaint is that the different levels do not lock together. You have to be careful when moving the planter.
Megan Thomley
Reviewed in the United States on July 6, 2024
Over all okay but they are pretty flimsy and don’t stack very well.
Lee Baker
Reviewed in Canada on July 16, 2024
Photos are misleading, thought this would be more of a brown colour but no it's that glaring plastic bright orange "terracotta." The pot itself is flimsy, doesn't stack very well which would be a key selling point. The drain holes also lead down to a hole in the center of the catch tray, which I don't understand. Also the pictures make it look misleadly smaller, I wanted to have this sit on my kitchen count just like the photo but it's big and bulky and takes up too much space. Plus that drain hole just makes it leak on to the counter. If I were you, I'd look elsewhere.
Adam Sperfslage
Reviewed in the United States on May 16, 2024
This planter box is very easy to assemble and sturdy to support the soil and plants in it. It is also easy to spin the planter on the tray to rotate plans that need more sunlight.
Linda Coltharp
Reviewed in the United States on April 1, 2024
It’s nice but the pot size is deceiving. The pot is smaller than I thought.
gre
Reviewed in the United States on June 1, 2023
I needed something for a variety of summer succulents. My old strawberry jar gave up the ghost this spring and this fit the bill perfectly. It’s very nice.
Kate Blomquist
Reviewed in the United States on June 10, 2022
The point of a tiered planter like this is that the water drips from tier to tier, watering the lower tiers. This is designed so that the holes are in the very center, so it just drips from top to bottom, and you have to water each individual section. You would still have to water the lower sections after rain, because they are blocked by, not watered by, top sections. Even the base that should collect the water has a hole, so it goes right through to the ground or floor.The holes are slightly raised, and there are water reservoirs, which some consider a good thing, because it keeps more moisture. I consider it a bad thing because it's easier to water than combat root rot.One of the claims is that the lower tier can rotate on the base. Well yeah. They are not attached in any way. It just sits on the base. You'd would have to hold it steady at the base, and carefully move the tier. I don't consider that "rotating."Doesn't seem sturdy at all. I can't attest to that because I returned it due to the design issues. I can't imagine it standing up to wind or the rogue wag of a dog tail.Pro: It is easy to assemble... It just stacks.
Kitkat
Reviewed in the United States on June 3, 2019
Why are the reviews included for the rail planter, that skews the ratings. I have the 3 tier planter. Just rec'd it. The bottom dish is warped but usable, everyone is asking this and i agree, there is a hole through the middle of the 3 pot sets and the dish but nothing included to make it one unit. It would've been nice if that pole was there with a handle to carry it and would make it possible to turn the planters like described above. I'm growing strawberries in them so it'll work but for the price charged (terra cotta) it should come complete. Deceiving description. You have to fiddle with it to get them to snap into each other but they do.
Buttercup
Reviewed in the United States on August 22, 2017
I purchased the cheaper plastic version of this stackable stack pot planter that they offer to try it out before committing to a resin one...I must say, I really love the look and space saving design of this stack pot planter. It looks a lot better than my long window boxes I was using previously and saves a decent amount of space with room for 9 different herbs (10 if you place a tall type in the top middle area).. I've gotten some nice compliments on it... The only complaint I have is that it seems I received a returned product, because it was clear someone had drilled their own drainage holes into my planter - the cut marks into the plastic were visible and not sleek like a manufactured item would be... I was unpleased with this as it means I can only use it outside unless I want water all over my floor from the draining... It works a little better outside anyways for full sun, I place the herbs that need a little more shade on the side away from the sun - but indoors you could just rotate the planter every other day....My young nephew thought the pots were floating by magic haha.. Anyways, it's a really decent, affordable, attractive planter that I definitely recommend..