Home
Rock Gardening Article
Tropical Gardening Links
Sitemap

Sponsored Links

 

Navigation

Rock gardening
Xeriscaping
Wild flower gardening
Vegetable gardening
Shade gardening
Tropical gardening
Cactus gardening
Organic gardening
Garden planning
Raised garden beds
Low water gardening

Books
All New Square Foot Gardening
All New Square Foot Gardening
by Mel Bartholomew
Our Price: $13.59
Used from: $12.65

Gardening When It Counts: Growing Food in Hard Times (Mother Earth News Wiser Living Series)
Gardening When It Counts: Growing Food in Hard Times (Mother Earth News Wiser Living Series)
by Steve Solomon
Our Price: $13.57
Used from: $12.31

The Vegetable Gardener's Bible: Discover Ed's High-Yield W-O-R-D System for All North American Gardening Regions
The Vegetable Gardener's Bible: Discover Ed's High-Yield W-O-R-D System for All North American Gardening Regions
by Edward C. Smith
Our Price: $16.47
Used from: $14.89

Square Foot Gardening: A New Way to Garden in Less Space with Less Work
Square Foot Gardening: A New Way to Garden in Less Space with Less Work
by Mel Bartholomew
Our Price: $13.57
Used from: $9.77



Raised Garden Beds

Creating raised garden beds is a wonderful way to get a garden started easily. When you plant your flowers or vegetables in raised garden beds, you don\'t have to pull weeds first, turn soil, or dig out a lot of rocks and other debris. Instead, you simply choose the location you want your garden bed to be, lay down your bed retainer walls, and fill it with dirt.

 

Raised garden beds are popular because they\'re easy, but also because they allow you to start growing seeds and small starter plants earlier in the season. A raised garden bed will become warmer earlier in the season than a ground based garden bed, and that allows you to start your gardening earlier in the year.

The first step to creating your raised garden bed is to choose the materials you\'ll use for the walls of the bed. There are a wide variety of materials that can be used to create your garden bed. Rocks for instance, can be piled together into a rock wall design. Bricks can also be used to create a more formal looking garden bed too. Wood or railroad ties are easy, attractive and sometimes even free too.

Regardless of what you choose to create your garden bed with, you\'ll need to gather enough materials to make the bed as high as you\'d like it. Some people like to create garden beds just a foot or two tall, while others create tiered garden beds which have multiple levels ranging from a foot or two in height, to four or five feet at the tallest level. How you design yours is completely up to you of course, and your budget.

Once you\'ve decided on the materials you\'ll use to create your raised garden bed, the next step is to choose the location for the bed. Where you place your garden bed will depend on how much space you need, and how much sunlight you\'ll need too. If you\'re building a raised garden bed to plant a vegetable garden for instance, you\'ll want to place the bed in a location which gets at least five to six hours of sunlight each day.

Now that you have your materials and location chosen, it\'s time to build the bed. And all you need to do is simply lay out your material in the design you want for the garden bed to create the bed frame. Once the frame for your garden bed is ready, then you just need to fill it with soil. Put enough soil into the new garden bed to bring it to at least one or two inches below the top of your garden bed frame.

All that\'s left now is planting. You can plant small starter seedling plants in your bed, sow seeds directly, or put more mature plants in, whichever you prefer. After planting your plants in the new garden bed, surround them with some type of mulch material such as tree bark or dry grass clippings, so the plants and bed won\'t dry out too quickly during hot spells.



 

Low-WaterGarden.com Recommended Products


Raised Garden Beds News

Green waste, droppings pack powerful punch - San Francisco Chronicle


Green waste, droppings pack powerful punch
San Francisco Chronicle,  USA - 12 hours ago
Q: I'm hoping you can help me integrate the various parts of my garden. I have a raised bed (approximately 50 square feet) used primarily for spring and ...

Read more...


Interest grows in fresh supply from community garden - Alton Telegraph


Interest grows in fresh supply from community garden
Alton Telegraph, IL - 19 hours ago
"R" Farm also teaches various classes in soap making, gardening, raised bed soil-less gardening, lacto-fermentation of food, jelly making, canning, ...

Read more...


The Seven Habits of Highly Successful Gardeners - Daily Green


Daily Green

The Seven Habits of Highly Successful Gardeners
Daily Green - Jan 5, 2009
These beds are frequently raised or at least corralled neatly by boards or -- I saw it once and am still impressed all these years later -- by long slabs of ...

Read more...


Troubleshooter: Man's laptop computer woes resolved - Corpus Christi Caller Times


Troubleshooter: Man's laptop computer woes resolved
Corpus Christi Caller Times, TX - Jan 4, 2009
Tuloso-Midway Primary School has the largest operation, with 20 productive 4-foot by 8-foot raised garden beds. Gardening interest is growing as fast as the ...

Read more...


Ho Chunk gardens preserved - Wisconsin Dells Events


Ho Chunk gardens preserved
Wisconsin Dells Events, WI - Jan 2, 2009
According to Gartner's research, the raised garden beds such as the ones at Hulburt Creek are rare. They are radiocarbon dated to be the oldest in the Upper ...

Read more...