Raised Bed Gardens in 30 minutes
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My Grandaddy was a wiz in the garden. Each year for as long as I can remember, he’d work the land and turn out an abundance of fresh melons and vegetables that kept the entire family harvest happy! Even when he got “in a bad way” as we say around here, he still kept a small garden and took great pride in tending it and generously giving away the fruits of his labor. Sometimes I think he only grew a garden because he enjoyed giving things away so much. If you know anyone in my family you know that part is in our blood, we love to give things to people.
I’ve never put in a garden like he did but I’ve always grown tomatoes in buckets on my back porch just like he showed me how to do. This year though, I decided to expand my container gardening enterprise and detail exactly how I am doing that for all of you. I plan on posting progress reports as the summer goes on and would love to hear from you about your gardening efforts as well!
As a novice gardener with limited time and resources, a raised bed garden is ideal for many reasons.
Benefits of Raised Bed Gardens:
- If you have back trouble or any problems bending over, raise bed gardens are the perfect solution. You can even place these on a tabletop or a raised platform to ease the need to bending over. Or, place them on the ground like I have and just put a chair out beside them.
- Raised beds help defeat the problem of burrowing pests and also have less pests in general.Weeds are much easier to control as you are beginning with weed free soil
- If your native soil doesn’t drain well or is not as vegetable friendly (sand, hard clay, etc), raised beds offer up a perfect solution
- Raised beds allow you to have a productive garden in limited space. You can put a kiddie pool on a back porch, on top of an old table, on a balcony, rooftop, even a sidewalk!
- These are great for water conservation. Holes are drilled on the sides two inches up from the bottom to allow needed drainage but water is retained longer in the bottom of the pool so that it helps to keep plants from drying out as soon as they would if planted in the ground where water was allowed to seep further down.
Why I Chose To Make My Gardens In Kiddie Pools
My ideal raised bed garden would have a wood frame, about 4 feet by 4 feet or two 2 by 4 feet frames and be twelve inches deep. However, there exist among us three types of women.
Type 1 : Declares that she wants a raised bed garden. She writes up a list of supplies, goes to the store and gathers them, comes home and builds it. (You go, girl!)
Type 2: Declares that she wants a raised bed garden. She batts her lashes at various individuals who step forward to build it for her with gladness in their hearts at being able to do such a task on her behalf (meet my sister).
Type 3: Declares that she wants a raised bed garden and hears crickets. She begs and pleads for a raised bed garden to be built and hardly an eyebrow raises. She extols the virtues of a raised bed garden to the rooftops and …is told that they sell tomatoes and bell peppers at nearby grocery stores.
You guessed it folks, Yours truly is a Type 3 gal!
Since I am completely lacking in builder gal skills…We’re going to have to do this the easy way.
And THIS is how I made THREE raised bed gardens from start to finish in under thirty minutes.
Supplies:
- Kiddie Pools -I am using two 60 inch pools which are roughly 12 inches deep and one 45 inch pool which is about seven inches deep
- Drill with 1/2 inch or 1 inch bit
- Bottom material: Mulch, peat moss, or hay ( whichever is least expensive and easiest for you to find. I used pine mulch. It was about two dollars a bag at wal mart). Some people suggest using gravel on the bottom but my gardening gurus (A.K.A. Shane Jordan and Del Olds) say that your roots do better if you have one of the three things I have listed instead. They absorb moisture and your roots tend to gravitate towards them whereas they just don’t go as deep with rocks.
- Good gardening soil. I used Jungle Growth Gardening Soil and ended up using two forty pounds bags for each large pool and one forty pound bag for the small one
- Little extra fertilizer (optional). I used Black Kow compost manure and just stirred about a fourth of a bag into each pool garden.
- Top soil – this is what I used as an additional filler (saves money) For the large pools I used two bags and one for the small pool.
- Mulch to go on top (on one pool I tried out pine needles as they are all over the place). I ended up with lots of leftover mulch so I used that on the rest. You need this to help keep weeds down later but at the start I put it on top of my plants because we were expecting a lot of hard rain and I wanted to protect them from erosion. I used 1/2 a bag for the small pool and 1 whole for each of the large pools. Once they come in better I will mulch more. Doing this will not only help with weeds but will also help retain moisture by slowing down the evaporation on top of the soil. Gardening Guru Shane also puts down a couple of layers of news paper and wets them before the mulch to keep the weeds from coming through BUT notes that you should only do this after your plants have sprouted up well and are growing well above the soil.
Begin by drilling holes, about two inches from the bottom, around the sides of your pool.
I drilled them at twelve inch intervals (I just estimated) and my holes are done with a one inch bit.
(I put a little mulch in my pool so you could see the hole)
Put an inch or two of mulch (or hay or peat moss) in the bottom of your pool.
Top that off with your gardening soil.
And here is the easy way to do that… I cut my 40 pound bag of dirt open with my shovel and shoveled it into the pool until the bag was light enough for me to easily lift. Then I poured the rest of the dirt in.
In gardening, as in cooking, easy is good. 🙂
Then I put about 1/4 of a bag of Black Kow compost into the pool.
(That’s how it is spelled on the bag. For pride’s sake, I feel the need to assure you that I know how to spell c-o-w)
I just cut my bag open with the shovel same as before and shoveled a bit in there, then I stirred it up a bit to distribute it throughout.
From there, I added about twenty pounds of topsoil. Topsoil is very cheap. I paid a little over a dollar a bag for it at Wally World.
I put in my plants according to the directions on each one.
These are cantaloupes and I likely have far too many but I’m just going to let them run over the pool and grow along the ground.
We’re expecting some hard rain and I’m worried about it washing away the soil around my plants before they have time to get rooted so I added some pine needles around the top to help protect the soil from the force of the rain. Once they come in better, I’m going to cover the top more fully with pine needles or mulch to help keep weeds down. When I got done with my other gardens, I ended up with an excess of mulch so I used that on the tops instead of the needles.
At our new house, pine needles are in abundance so I wanted to experiment with using something I had available.
These gardens are so nice because they are such an easy to manage size. This is Katy watering the smallest garden with our watering can. Right now the kids are fighting over who gets to water what garden. We’ll see if that holds up!
I let them each have a say in planting one thing. Brady chose cantaloupes and Katy chose carrots. Tomatoes were my first choice because they are so widely used in cooking and incredibly easy to put up in the freezer or for canning. Fried green tomatoes will be a wonderful treat soon, too! I’ll show you how I put up my vegetables as they begin to come in. There is nothing at all like tomatoes from your own garden to put into wintertime stews and other dishes!
Bell Peppers are another favorite of mine but almost a dollar each to buy! Like tomatoes, they are very easy to put up as well so the two of those should prove to be a money saving crop for me.
I’ll try to get you some pictures of us with the large gardens soon so you can have a better perspective of their size.
This is four tomato plants with carrots planted around the outer edge.
I prefer to start my plants indoors from seeds but due to moving, I opted for buying plants this year.
Bell peppers in the center with Vidalia onions going around the outer edge.
My three gardens. Start to finish, the entire project was done in under thirty minutes.
Although it took me about ten minutes to get all of my plants in :).
There is plenty of space in between them for the lawn mower but surprisingly, they are also easy to move around still.
I’ve seen some people say these will last for five or six years but I’m thinking three or four tops until they become brittle and need replacing.
All in all, nice little gardens and very little trouble! I can’t imagine an easier way. I’ll keep you posted all summer on how they are coming along. Hopefully, having Southern Plate readers to answer to will keep me motivated when I really don’t want to go outside in the Alabama summer heat!
Price breakdown:
Small Kiddie Pool – free (was under my back porch from last year but normally costs $10)
5 FT Kiddie Pools – $15 each (check now to see if anyone is giving these away from last year. They get cracks in them but would be perfect for a garden still!)
Mulch – 3 bags at $2.50 (approx) per bag
Jungle Growth Garden Soil – 5 bags at Approx $7 per bag
Top Soil – 5 bags at $1.24 per bag
Total cost for three raised bed gardens:
Minus $10 off coupon I used at Lowe’s =68.70
Approximate cost of a small pool garden would be: $20.74
Approximate cost of a large pool garden would be: $33.98
Note: I found it was cheaper to buy mulch and top soil at Wal Mart although I purchased my garden soil at Lowes because I had a coupon to use there to get $10 off.
I did math for y’all again. If this ain’t love, I don’t know what is!
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We’re FINALLY going to be living in our new house as of this weekend! We’ve been moving slowly but school activities have been so incredibly busy lately (where is the second wife when you need one?). Friday my in laws are coming over from Georgia as well as my brother and sister in law and their two young ones to help us move. Its going to be an exhausting weekend but well worth the trouble! We’re so grateful to have all of the help!
Of course, I am spending my time fretting over what to feed everyone instead of packing.. ~grins~
I hope you all have a wonderful weekend!
Gratefully,
Christy 🙂
Oh my that is ingenious! We are city dwellers and I have a patio. I’ve been trying to figure out how to have a garden and here it is! Our planting season is past (we are also in the desert), but I will definitely be doing this for a winter garden.
I’d love to see how you do tomatoes in buckets — those would be perfect for my patio!
I think it’s a wonderful idea…I would take it one step further. Because I’m the way I am…I would have bought some brown or rust color spray paint or primer and painted them all a wood or natural color so it doesn’t look so much like swimming pools! LOL We’re a military family and entertain ALOT in the summer…but other than that I LOVE it. You’re so clever.
Thanks for the idea! I’m gonna use it for sure!!!
Abby
Right on, sister! You read my mind. I am always spray painting things to make them more decorative or to look fresh each season. I thought I would put some round stones stacked around them too.
ohhh, that’s a great idea. I love it.
surrounding it with stone would give it a more permanent feel…now…of to find big ol rocks!
LOL
Christy:
As always I am inspired by you and Southern Plate! I have never had any luck with tomato plants, but am going to make myself a container garden, too! yippee!
Do you fertilize them at all during the season?
xxx
Paula
Ok so this is wonderful! When we bought our new house over a year ago, we thought that we would never be able to have a garden there because the back yard and the front yard are on a slope. But after seeing this…I am so getting my garden again! You are such an angel! Thank you!!!
Great idea! I just planted a garden along my fence line for the first time EVER… I”m so excited! My pour little cantaloupe plant doesn’t look so good today. I should go and get some mulch to go around them. I never thought of that and I love the idea of the newspaper under it….
Thanks Christy! You have blessed me again! I’m praying for a great weekend and easy move and settling in.
Merrie,
You bless me more than I could ever say.
I cannot be more sincere. Thank you so very much.
I appreciate your prayers 🙂
Gratefully,
Christy
I just want to warn folks to be careful if you use hay or manure from animals that eat hay. In my neck of the woods , Texas , most people who raise hay treat their fields with a weed killer. Graze-on is one of the most widely used brands. If you use this hay or manure from a cow that eats this hay you will make the soil unfit for anything. I found out the hard way. I put it on a garden that was 70 X 100 feet and all my plants that had green leaves one day looked like ‘tater chips on pipe cleaners the next.
Great points Joe, thank you so much!!!
Y’all, read Joe’s comment
I don’t know enough about compost, manure, and all that to trust myself (or to gather it myself) so I just purchased it in a bag at Lowes. That way I know it is ready to go in the garden!
I don’t have ready access to hay either but you made an excellent point for those who may use it!
I really appreciate you commenting!
Gratefully,
Christy
My aunt showed us her raised garden last month and I’ve been bugging my husband to make one for us on our tiny apartment patio. Maybe using the pool will get us to actually make one….
You sound like me!
If you get a chance, take a gander at the 45 inch pools from wally world, they are awfully portable and a great size for patios!