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alternative to corrugated iron for back of raised bed?
Hello there
I am trying to get back into reuse an area of our garden which is a sort-of raised bed. The bed is around 6ft wide and 5ft front to back. It has brickwork to around 15" high at the front and two sides. At the rear the brickwork has fallen away (was never properly made, I think), and the bed is open to our neighbours fence - concrete post and cheap wooden fence panels. These are also falling apart, so the soil is spilling out at the rear. There is no real room between their fence and the back of the bed - perhaps a couple of inches. I am trying to think of the best way to create a, possibly temporary, back wall to the bed for next spring and beyond. My initial though was for a short width of corrugated iron, jammed in between the neighbours fence post and the back of the raised bed. I'm pretty sure this would work well, but would be unsightly. so I'm looking for alternatives... Are there any (cheap!) sheet materials which would be suitable for this, in terms of flexibility, weatherproofing, etc., but would not be so ugly? Thanks for any thoughts jon N |
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alternative to corrugated iron for back of raised bed?
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alternative to corrugated iron for back of raised bed?
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alternative to corrugated iron for back of raised bed?
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alternative to corrugated iron for back of raised bed?
On 17/12/2013 22:49, Charlie Pridham wrote:
"David Hill" wrote in message ... On 17/12/2013 18:11, Janet wrote: In article , says... Hello there I am trying to get back into reuse an area of our garden which is a sort-of raised bed. The bed is around 6ft wide and 5ft front to back. It has brickwork to around 15" high at the front and two sides. At the rear the brickwork has fallen away (was never properly made, I think), and the bed is open to our neighbours fence - concrete post and cheap wooden fence panels. These are also falling apart, so the soil is spilling out at the rear. There is no real room between their fence and the back of the bed - perhaps a couple of inches. I am trying to think of the best way to create a, possibly temporary, back wall to the bed for next spring and beyond. My initial though was for a short width of corrugated iron, jammed in between the neighbours fence post and the back of the raised bed. I'm pretty sure this would work well, but would be unsightly. so I'm looking for alternatives... Are there any (cheap!) sheet materials which would be suitable for this, in terms of flexibility, weatherproofing, etc., but would not be so ugly? For such a small bed, I'd dig out a trench of soil at the back of the bed (pile it up on the soil at the front of the bed) and remake the back wall with concrete blocks then backfill the soil. The blocks will last a lifetime. They are often available second hand for free, and for that height and position you don't need to mortar them. Janet. I'm not going to mention corrugated asbestos sheeting. Why not :~) I am trying to come up with a new use for an old shed roof, trying to double bag it for the dump is pretty tricky. I've used it for topping benches so that it stays damp and I can see no risk in those conditions, likewise if used as a retaining wall I can't see any risk. When it's dry and over head then that's a different matter. David @ a wet side of Swansea bay. |
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