Planning a Raised Flower Bed Garden: Perfect for the Elderly and Disabled Gardeners
June 24, 2008
Planning a Raised Flower Bed Garden: Perfect for the Elderly and Disabled Gardeners
Raised flowerbeds are perfect for older or disabled gardeners as well as for anyone who dislike doing a lot of hard-on-the-back bending. An easy way to mark where you want your beds to be placed is by sprinkling flour on the ground, then measuring the area you?ve marked off with a tape measure to determine how much lumber you will need to purchase for the sides of the bed.
Raised beds should be sufficiently deep to comfortably grow the plants you wish to grow but narrow enough to make reaching the middle from either side easy, especially important if you plan to grow vegetables or flowers for cutting. And remember to leave a comfortably wide path between beds as well.
Once you’ve established the desired sizes for your raised garden beds, buy the lumber necessary for raising the bed to the desired height. Dig a shallow trench at least a couple of inches in depth around the bed perimeters; if your beds are located on a hillside, dig the top trench deeper than the lower one to ensure that the finished bed sides will be level.
Then build the box sides for the raised bed, settling the lumber into the groove of the trench. Adding sunken posts at bed corners will make them more stable. Remember that all wood can warp, and place your boards so that visible curves are on the outside of the bed to avoid having nails pop out later on.
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Cedar Creek 1824 Raised Garden Buy new: $87.75 Usually ships in 2-3 business days |
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Cedar Creek 1836 Raised Garden Buy new: $94.50 Usually ships in 2-3 business days |
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Cedar Creek 2424 Raised Garden Buy new: $94.50 Usually ships in 2-3 business days |
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Cedar Creek 2436 Raised Garden Buy new: $101.25 Usually ships in 2-3 business days |
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Cedar Creek 3624 Raised Garden Buy new: $114.75 Usually ships in 2-3 business days |
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Cedar Creek 3636 Raised Container Gardens |
If you’re using railroad ties, you can simply lay them on the ground except as you need to level to accommodate hilly terrain. Make the box as solid as possible and pack dirt down around the edges.
Soil quality is very important for raised bed gardening: The better the soil is, the lower the bed can be. Poor soils require that beds be at least a foot above the ground level to allow for a base layer of gravel and sand to increase drainage. If your property has serious drainage problems hiring a contractor to help you plan your garden is a wise move.
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Garden Tip...
It is a mistake to try to stimulate into growth, by the use of fertilizers, those plants which give every indication of being sickly or stunted; they will make such a plant sicker, if they do not kill it outright. If guano is used in potting soil, it should be in the proportion of one pound to every bushel of soil.
~ James Sheehan
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Then fill the bed containers with soil. If you live where soils are clay or otherwise heavy, lighten them by mixing in some sand and organic matter first. Buying premixed potting or topsoil soil that contains a good balance of sand, peat, and organic matter is the easiest way to go, but can be costly if your raised beds are large and difficult to do unless you have an easy way to haul bags of soil or the garden center you frequent offers delivery.
Once your beds are filled with soil, you?re ready to plant!
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Garden Tip...
It is a mistake to crowd too many plants into a basket, if they grow they will soon become root-bound, stunted, and look sickly. If the hanging basket be of the ordinary size, one large and choice plant placed in the centre with a few graceful vines to droop over the edges, will have a better effect when established and growing, than if it were crowded with plants at the time of filling. Hanging baskets being constantly suspended, they are exposed to draughts of air from all sides, and the soil is soon dried out, hence careful watching is necessary in order to prevent the contents from becoming too dry. If the moss appears to be dry, take the basket down and dip it once or twice in a pail of water, this is better than sprinkling from a watering-pot. In filling hanging baskets, or vases of any kind, we invariably cover the surface of the soil with the same green moss used for lining, which, while it adds materially to the pleasing appearance of the whole, at the same time prevents the soil from drying out or becoming baked on the surface.
~ James Sheehan
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