Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
Raised beds
I have a gravel garden .Last summer , a friend helped me to make a raised
bed from new 'sleepers'.It looks great. I filled it with top soil, and planted it with various small plants,including French lavender which would not have survived in my cold clay wet Scottish soil of a normal garden! I intend making another smaller one for ornamental plants and growing some nice veggies in the original bed. I treated the wood with stained wood oil and it reaslly is a nice contrast against the gravel. Good luck to anyone else thinking of making a raised bed. Roy "Keith (Dorset)" wrote in message ... Steve, I use 6in by 4in treated timber boards just screwed together. I dug over the soil the first year and added compost. Every year I add a bit more compost and its gradually building up. You don't need to fill them all up the first season. Make three beds and rotate them with roots, brassicas and 'other' (look up 'crop roatation'). I don't like the sound of gravel and mulch sheets as its very detrimental to wildlife - nothing can feed... birds, animals, insects - it might as well be concrete. But that's just me... Good luck, Keith "80/20" wrote in message oups.com... I have a small lawn that is not it's best because it is used in the summer as a patio area, the table, chairs and umbrella stand all turn the lawn yellow. I am thinking of digging it up and covering the area will gravel, after putting down a mulch sheet. I also would like to put triangular raised beds on the 4 corners to grow veg in. Questions: How high would you make the beds? I have plenty of home made compost, could this be used to fill the beds? What crops would you recommend? TIA Steve |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Raised beds - really raised | Edible Gardening | |||
Raised beds - really raised | Edible Gardening | |||
Why are raised beds raised? | United Kingdom | |||
RAISED VEGETABLE GARDEN BEDS | Gardening | |||
Raised Beds Orientation? | Gardening |