| Management number | 232545041 | Release Date | 2026/06/21 | List Price | $1.87 | Model Number | 232545041 | ||
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The Covert Fabric Pot is built for growers who understand that what your plants grow in is just as important as what you feed them. Constructed from 256 GSM tear-resistant nonwoven fabric with double-stitched seams and reinforced handles, these pots are designed to perform through multiple seasons of heavy use — not just a single run.
The container your plants live in controls drainage, root architecture, temperature, and oxygen availability. Get it right and everything else you do in the grow becomes more effective. Get it wrong and you're fighting your substrate from day one.
Why Fabric Weight Actually Matters
Not all fabric pots are made the same. GSM — grams per square meter — is the standard measure of fabric density and durability, and it's where most budget bags cut corners.
At 256 GSM, this fabric is thick enough to hold structural shape under a fully saturated soil load, withstand repeated handling and transport without tearing, and survive multiple wash cycles between runs. The pore structure stays consistent across the entire container wall — which matters for even air exchange and reliable drainage. Many bags sold at lower price points use 100–150 GSM material that stretches out of shape, tears at the handles, and loses structural integrity within a season. The 256 GSM nonwoven used here is purpose-built for growing operations that take the work seriously.
What Fabric Does That Plastic Can't
In a plastic pot, roots hit the container wall and have nowhere productive to go. They begin circling — wrapping around the inside of the pot in a dense, tangled mass that restricts water and nutrient flow and keeps the plant in a state of low-level stress throughout the grow. By the time you pull the plant out, the root system looks like a solid block, and transplant recovery takes weeks.
Fabric solves this at the structural level. The breathable nonwoven wall allows air to pass through from every angle. When a root tip reaches the fabric and contacts dry air, it stops growing and the plant responds by branching — producing multiple new lateral roots at that point. This process, called air pruning, happens continuously across the entire surface of the container. The result is a root system that's dense, highly branched, and maximally efficient at nutrient and water uptake, rather than a circling tangle starved for oxygen.
Beyond root architecture, the breathable wall also prevents heat buildup in the root zone — a real issue under high-intensity lighting. Excess moisture wicks laterally out through the fabric instead of pooling at the base, which dramatically reduces the conditions that lead to root rot and overwatering stress.
Plastic vs. Fabric: What Changes at the Root Zone
Construction & Key Features
Size Guide
| Size | Cubic Feet | Diameter × Height | Best For |
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| 1 Gallon | 0.18 cu ft | 6.3" × 7.8" | Seedlings, transplants, herbs |
| 2 Gallon | 0.27 cu ft | 7.8" × 7.8" | Small herbs, early-stage transplants |
| 3 Gallon | 0.50 cu ft | 9.4" × 9.8" | Compact vegetables, flowers |
| 5 Gallon | 0.79 cu ft | 11.8" × 9.8" | Tomatoes, peppers, most indoor crops |
| 7 Gallon | 1.08 cu ft | 13.8" × 9.8" | Large tomatoes, squash, dahlias |
| 10 Gallon | 1.68 cu ft | 15.7" × 11.8" | Large flowering plants, shrubs |
| 15 Gallon | 2.65 cu ft | 19.7" × 11.8" | Trees, large perennials, outdoor crops |
Works Well For
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