Summary
What this review covers
This page covers the 100 pack count, 2.5 inch square size, deep pot shape, black plastic body, and fit for seedlings and cuttings.
Pros
The upside
- The 2.5 inch square size supports compact pot-up rows on shelves and benches.
- The deep shape gives small seedlings and cuttings a defined root pocket.
- The 100 pack count suits repeated sowing rounds, backup starts, and propagation batches.
Cons
The tradeoffs
- The small footprint needs steady moisture checks during active growth.
- A support tray is needed for carrying, watering, and keeping rows together.
Who it is for
Fit and feel
Good match:
These Landmark pots fit gardeners who pot up small seedlings, rooted cuttings, backup starts, and compact shelf batches.
What to know:
Compact pots ask for regular moisture checks. Use clear labels and keep the group in a tray so each seedling stays easy to follow.
Where to check it
Check Landmark 100 Pack 2.5 Inch Square Deep Nursery Pots
Open the current merchant listing if the buyer fit and tradeoffs still line up.
- Amazon opens the Landmark 2.5 inch square deep nursery pots product page.
Breakdown
Full review
A compact deep pot for young starts
Landmark 2.5 inch square deep nursery pots give young seedlings and cuttings a small container with a defined root pocket. The square shape keeps rows tidy in a tray, while the black plastic body gives the pot a familiar nursery feel.
The 2.5 inch size suits early pot-up work when a plant has outgrown a starter cell and still belongs in a compact shelf space.
Useful for repeated propagation rounds
The 100 pack count gives a gardener room for herbs, flowers, vegetables, extras, and cuttings. Matching pots make a tray easier to fill, label, water, and move.
Keep the pots in a stable support tray before adding mix. A tray keeps the group readable and catches water during the first settling pass.
Good match
These Landmark pots fit gardeners who pot up small seedlings, rooted cuttings, backup starts, and compact shelf batches.
What to know
Compact pots ask for regular moisture checks. Use clear labels and keep the group in a tray so each seedling stays easy to follow.