“Flowers always make people better, happier, and more helpful; they are
sunshine, food and medicine for the soul.”-Luther Burbank
I love to garden. I
love planting seeds in my greenhouse, nurturing
them until after our last frost date and then moving them out to the garden, so
that they flourish and produce tasty and healthy food for my family. I have a native garden
approach to my garden chores. I have several garden spots throughout my farm,
mainly because I live in a very wooded area and try to place garden spots where
they can receive sunlight throughout the day. I also could not possibly weed
all of my gardens, so I try to use a weed eater or a mower to get the heavy
stuff and beyond that I let the other so called “weeds” alone. I try to let all
of the “weeds” that do not directly hinder my plants from producing go to
flower or seed to produce food for my honey bees.
I have found that I
like to use raised beds in my garden. I feel a little more in control of
specifically nurturing and watering that area of the garden, especially during
a drought, which in Texas we often have. I also feel that it is easier for me
to not worry about mowing over my vegetable plants by accident when mowing,
because the plants are safely enclosed. When making my raised beds, I love to
use recycled materials because I love to see what my husband and I can make,
repurpose, or recycle without spending much money! Living on a farm can be
expensive and sometimes money can be scarce, so I always try to save as much money
as I can on our projects.
This year our raised beds literally fell apart as I was preparing my spring
garden. I placed an ad on https://www.freecycle.org/ requesting
lumber or cinder blocks to build some garden beds. Oh my! I hit the jackpot and
got lots of free lumber! My husband went with me to pick up some 6 feet by 8
feet wooden fencing, which you should always have a friend go with you when
meeting an unknown person for safety reasons.
The first step my husband did was to separate the wood into the height we
wanted the beds to be. Our first raised bed was 3 boards high, but the
subsequent beds we made were only two boards high.
The next step we did was to connect 2 sides of the boards together by using
scrap wood and screws, so that we could form a rectangle shaped raised bed with
the dimensions of 16 feet by 8 feet.
Then we added the 2 long sides of the raised bed to the shorter sides by
using more scrap boards as corners and screwing them into each side of the
wood.
We made sure each sure each side of the raised bed were screwed in sturdy.
We thought it would be better to have the scrap wood we added on the outside of
the raised beds, because the added soil would push outward on the boards and
the scrap wood could reinforce the wood from bowing outward.
That is it. It was
very simple and quick. And best of all it did not cost me any money! I filled the raised beds with soil leftover
from the pond excavation, compost, and shredded bark I got free from the tree
cutting company. All that is left to do
is to transfer the plants from the greenhouse.
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