working hard - i believe emily and i were sitting on the deck eating girl scout cookies at this moment |
Here's what you need for one 6x3 raised bed:
- Drill
- Measuring Tape
- Saw - we used a 10 inch miter saw
- (6) Cedar Dog Eared Fence Pickets - 6 ft by 6 in
- (2) 1x2 Furring Strips - 8 ft long
- (1) 2x2 Furring Strip - 8 ft long
- Screws - we used 1.25 inch exterior screws
You can use other types of wood but here are a few reasons we went with cedar. 1) It's not treated with chemicals which is a good thing since we're growing food in these boxes. 2) It's weather resistant which means it will last longer than something like untreated pine. 3) It's cheap! A 6x3 foot box (that is one foot tall) requires six cedar fence panels and at $2.50 a piece, plus the furring strips, that's less than $20 per box for the wood. Not bad at all. Now that you know what you need, here is how we built them:
raised bed sketch (click to view larger) |
here we have cut off the dog ears ...because that doesn't sound weird at all |
1) Cut the dog ears (the rounded parts) off your pickets.
2) Take two of the cedar pickets and cut them in half. These will form the short sides of your box.
3) Cut your 1x2 furring strips as tall as the height of two boards laid next to each other, which should be about 12 inches. You need 3 furring strips for each short side and 5 furring strips for each long side; so you need (16) 12 inch furring strip pieces total.
4) Pre-drill two holes in each furring strip piece. The furring strips are thin so pre-drilling your holes decreases the chance that they will split as you drill in the screw.
nathan pre-drilling the holes and simon working the saw! |
one of the short sides of the raised bed |
6) Lay two of the 6 ft pieces next to each other and and add 5 supports. Repeat with remaining 6 ft boards.
nathan holding the furring strip in place and a view of the furring strip from the inside of the bed |
8) Lay down some weed guard and fill your box with dirt. This was my job and despite the fact that half our bags of dirt were mud I enjoyed it. Don't be afraid to get a little dirty!
9) Optional step: find an adorable helper that enjoys digging in the dirt :)
In the end the bed we built ended up being 15x3 feet. This is wonderful because it was like adding on two more boxes without pushing the garden out any farther into the yard. Up next: adding a fence to keep pesky puppies out of the garden. We are building the picket fence ourselves, which sounds impressive but it's pretty simple. I will have a short tutorial on that after we finish it. I am also working on a container gardening post, it should be up this week!
the finish product...with a nice layer of snow! so happy to have the extra space |
-Kelly
4 comments:
9) During hard work, let pregnant lady sit on her ass and trim your dead plants. This was probably the most important step! J/K the box turned out great!
It looks great! I was thinking it would be a lot more costly, how about the dirt, is there a certain brand or anything specific you suggest?
Well it's not like you needed to be hauling dirt or something! And one less flower bed for me to clean :)
Thank you Katy! They really are pretty cheap, the dirt is a little more expensive though. I wouldn't recommend something like miracle gro as it has a lot of fertilizers and who knows what. In fact I would try to avoid big box stores for your dirt. We buy a from a local place so I can't give a brand recommendation but what we use is 2 parts potting soil to 1 part amendment. The amendment we use is made up of compost, peat moss, mushroom mix and a few other things. I would recommend trying to find a local nursery or home improvement store; I don't know a ton about this topic but anywhere like that should have some sort of amendment and then the potting soil is basically just plain dirt (and the cheaper of the two). Hope that helps and let me know if you have any other questions!
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