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1713 days ago

Tips to help create the ultimate raised vegetable garden

Garry Tranter from Price My House for Free Limited

1. Keep it simple
You can’t beat raised vegetable beds for convenience. They’re much easier on your back than in-ground beds and their elevated height means weeds won’t spread so quickly from lawns and other areas. You can also build them anywhere, even over existing concrete, and they’re ideal for sloping sites. If you’re a newbie gardener, they’re more manageable than in-ground beds because you don’t have to worry about testing the pH or improving the quality of your existing soil. Just fill your raised bed with the good stuff that’s specially mixed for growing veges, which you can buy at any garden centre or landscape supply company.

2. Built in
When built well, raised vege beds add smart structure to the garden, which is important when space is tight and your vege patch is close to outdoor living areas. If you use similar materials or colours, the beds can be integrated beautifully with existing built elements. You can also use them for seating by using a wide capping on the tops.

3. Position
The ideal location for raised vegetable beds is virtually the same as in-ground types: level ground (although they can be built on slopes if built across, not down the slope), a minimum of 6 hours of sunlight a day, shelter from wind and frost, and proximity to the kitchen and a hose or other water source. A north-facing position with little shade from overhanging trees and buildings is perfect. However, there are always variations in gardening and veges can be grown in a variety of different aspects, even facing south. It just depends on the type of crop you want to grow.

4. Number of beds
For new gardeners, 3-4 small raised beds will be plenty of work to start off with. You’re better to begin small and have gardens that are well maintained and productive than try to manage several larger beds and give up because it’s all too hard.

5. What soil mix?
There are lots of options when it comes to vege-growing soil mixes, but the chief requirement is that it’s nutrient-rich and free-draining. To make your own, use sterile (no weed seeds) topsoil mixed with homemade or mushroom compost, sheep pellets or other animal manure, hay, bark fines (a fine bark blend) and other organic material.

6. Material choice
Timber boards, stone, brick, concrete block, untreated macrocarpa and corrugated steel are all good options. Ground-treated timber should be lined with polythene so the chemical preservatives used to stop rot won’t leach into the soil. Untreated macrocarpa and other timbers such as cedar contain natural anti-fungicidal oils that are safe for growing edibles.

7. Size
The most important dimension for raised beds is width, to ensure you can easily reach across to the middle from all sides for weeding and harvesting. For access from three sides only, the ideal width is about 1m; from all sides, about 1.5m wide. The length is up to you but it is cheaper if you build to fit standard timber sizes. The depth depends on the veges you want to grow. Aim for around 500mm for root crops such as carrots and potatoes, but for shallow-rooted crops like leafy greens, beds can be 300mm deep.

8. Water
Because the soil in raised beds dries out more quickly, you need to water them more often. You may also need to mulch in summer. Time-poor gardeners could consider a pre-made self-irrigating garden bed or use a wicking system which involves building a reservoir for water below the soil level, meaning less water evaporation.

9. Ready-made
While a key advantage of built-in beds is they can be designed to fit your space, it’s sometimes easier to buy one of the many pre-built raised beds now on the market. Some come with self-watering systems and covers to keep the bugs out and protect crops from wind and heavy rain.

10. On the grass
If you’re planning to build a raised bed on a lawn, kill the grass first by covering it with sheets of cardboard or a tarpaulin for about 6 weeks, or skim off the grass with a sharp spade. Cover the bottom of the raised bed with a thick layer of newspaper or weed mat to prevent grass or weeds growing back.

11. Be safe
Before you start digging holes for posts and so forth, check that there are no water, gas or electricity pipes below. And don’t build a raised bed on a wooden deck unless you are sure it can take the weight.

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More messages from your neighbours
6 days ago

FAMILY OF POTHOLES

Michael from Trentham

Not the biggest pothole in NZ but Alexander Road in Trentham has one of its round-abouts with a family of potholes on the roading making it difficult to avoid them.

The Upper Hutt City Council was quick and ridiculous to reduce the speed limit of all Alexander Road from 80kg to 50kg but not so quick to repair this multiple of potholes.

I must not hold my breath because nearly 4 years ago I held a discussion with the UHCC roading chief on the appalling state of the busy Ward Street road in Wallaceville and he agreed but asked me which would you prefer - fixing up Fergusson Drive or Ward Street as a priority. Well nothing has been done either to Fergusson Drive.

I am hoping the new Government with its plans to reverse some speed restrictions and introduce reducing speed restrictions on some roads, will prompt the UHCC to wake up their ideas of Alexander Road which in most part is non urban residential housing.

2 days ago

Lest we forget...

The Team from Neighbourly.co.nz

On this ANZAC Day, let's take a moment to remember and honor the brave men and women who have served and continue to serve our country.

Tell us who are you honouring today. Whether it's a story from the battlefield or a memory of a family member who fought in the war, we'd love you to share your stories below.

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5 days ago

Poll: Does the building consent process need to change?

The Team from Neighbourly.co.nz

We definitely need homes that are fit to live in but there are often frustrations when it comes to getting consent to modify your own home.
Do you think changes need made to the current process for building consent? Share your thoughts below.

Type 'Not For Print' if you wish your comments to be excluded from the Conversations column of your local paper.

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Does the building consent process need to change?
  • 91.3% Yes
    91.3% Complete
  • 8.2% No
    8.2% Complete
  • 0.5% Other - I'll share below!
    0.5% Complete
1451 votes