Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Raised beds advice
Hi all,
As I don't have a car, I've converted my back driveway into what will be raised veg beds next year, by building walls with some bricks. This year I've grown veg in pots, using "organic" peat-free compost, and when the veg are over I'm going to empty the spent compost into the new beds to form the bottom layer of soil. I am wondering what to fill up the rest with - I was considering just getting some topsoil for it. I wonder if anyone could advise me if I should put a layer of manure in next, before the topsoil? Obviously I want to keep these relatively shallow (2ft deep) beds as productive as possible for as long as possible, with minimum maintenance. Any help much appreciated! Thanks in advance, Andrew http://greencottage.burysolarclub.net |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
On Thu, 09 Sep 2004 09:38:11 GMT, "Andy Hunt"
wrote: Hi all, As I don't have a car, I've converted my back driveway into what will be raised veg beds next year, by building walls with some bricks. This year I've grown veg in pots, using "organic" peat-free compost, and when the veg are over I'm going to empty the spent compost into the new beds to form the bottom layer of soil. I am wondering what to fill up the rest with - I was considering just getting some topsoil for it. I wonder if anyone could advise me if I should put a layer of manure in next, before the topsoil? Obviously I want to keep these relatively shallow (2ft deep) beds as productive as possible for as long as possible, with minimum maintenance. Any help much appreciated! Thanks in advance, What's the base like? I'm thinking in terms of drainage - if the beds are made up on a concrete pan then you'll need to make provision for it. Likewise if the ground is compacted - it'd be worth roughing up down to a depth of a foot or so first. I'd be inclined to treat a walled bed much like a giant pot - so if you placed the spent compost at the very bottom you might end up clogging the drainage. Some light hardcore might be appropriate? As regards the soil, I don't see why a mix of topsoil and manure wouldn't be just fine. To some extent you'll be able to adjust the mix over time ( more soil, a bit of gravel or sand if necessary ). I'd emphasize the mix though, rather than layers - save for the top six inches or so, which ought to be a light soil layer. This last layer will have to be put on quite some time after the bed has been infilled - otherwise you might find that, as they say, 'contents are liable to settle'. As for minimum maintenance, bear in mind that most manure comes packed with seeds etc...and there's no telling what bought-in topsoil will contain. Ideally a top layer of soil-based potting compost would be ideal - but expensive! Sounds like a fascinating project though - and if you designed the walls with some slots in, you could knock up some cloches/fleece frames to fit - which would help to extend the season. Regards, -- Stephen Howard - Woodwind repairs & period restorations www.shwoodwind.co.uk Emails to: showard{whoisat}shwoodwind{dot}co{dot}uk |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
g'day andy,
my main medium in the raised beds i do is mushroom compost, i do add any other organic material i may have around at the time but you could add animal manures, or any other compost you can get hold of at the time. len snipped -- happy gardening 'it works for me it could work for you,' "in the end ya' gotta do what ya' gotta do" but consider others and the environment http://members.optusnet.com.au/~gardenlen1/ my e/mail addies have spam filters you should know what to delete before you send. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
What's the base like? I'm thinking in terms of drainage - if the beds are made up on a concrete pan then you'll need to make provision for it. Likewise if the ground is compacted - it'd be worth roughing up down to a depth of a foot or so first. The base is concrete, but on a slight slope which will obviously help the drainage. Also, the walls are 'dry stone walls' with no cement in between the bricks, which should help the drainage too. I'd be inclined to treat a walled bed much like a giant pot - so if you placed the spent compost at the very bottom you might end up clogging the drainage. Some light hardcore might be appropriate? I'll have a think - I've got a few broken bricks in there, but not many. The above factors might make drainage OK. Also, I over-estimated the depth of the beds in my first post - they are only just over a foot or so deep. So the 'large pot' scenario is probably the most appropriate here! Sounds like a fascinating project though - and if you designed the walls with some slots in, you could knock up some cloches/fleece frames to fit - which would help to extend the season. Now there's an idea . . . mini-polytunnels . . . I could plant some spuds in the autumn after the main veg are over, and have them fresh at Christmas! And use them in the spring too, to get nice big strong plants early in the year. Thanks for that one!!! Andy http://greencottage.burysolarclub.net |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
my main medium in the raised beds i do is mushroom compost, i do add any other organic material i may have around at the time but you could add animal manures, or any other compost you can get hold of at the time. I've got some compost composting in my composter currently, so maybe if I put all the autumn garden waste in it too, with a big dose of compost accelerator, I can empty it into my new beds in the spring before the top layer of soil. Your mention of mushroom compost reminds me - I've got shaggy ink caps coming up in one of my tyre pots I've got going at the minute. I believe they're edible . . . hopefully they will persist once I've emptied the compost into the base of my new beds. Andy |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
On Fri, 10 Sep 2004 18:42:37 GMT, "Andy Hunt"
wrote: What's the base like? I'm thinking in terms of drainage - if the beds are made up on a concrete pan then you'll need to make provision for it. Likewise if the ground is compacted - it'd be worth roughing up down to a depth of a foot or so first. The base is concrete, but on a slight slope which will obviously help the drainage. Also, the walls are 'dry stone walls' with no cement in between the bricks, which should help the drainage too. In which case you might suffer from over-drainage! I'd be inclined to treat a walled bed much like a giant pot - so if you placed the spent compost at the very bottom you might end up clogging the drainage. Some light hardcore might be appropriate? I'll have a think - I've got a few broken bricks in there, but not many. The above factors might make drainage OK. Also, I over-estimated the depth of the beds in my first post - they are only just over a foot or so deep. So the 'large pot' scenario is probably the most appropriate here! I guess you'll have to play it by ear, but with such a shallow bed you might find it pays to install a seep hose halfway down the bed, or at least give some consideration to a semi-automatic watering system...which could be something as simple as a strategically punctured hose fitted round the rim of the bed. Sounds like a fascinating project though - and if you designed the walls with some slots in, you could knock up some cloches/fleece frames to fit - which would help to extend the season. Now there's an idea . . . mini-polytunnels . . . I could plant some spuds in the autumn after the main veg are over, and have them fresh at Christmas! And use them in the spring too, to get nice big strong plants early in the year. Thanks for that one!!! I'm jealous already! And if you knock up an enviromesh frame you're never going to have to worry about a late frost knocking back your seedlings, nor the early blackfly season. Regards, -- Stephen Howard - Woodwind repairs & period restorations http://www.shwoodwind.co.uk Emails to: showard{who is at}shwoodwind{dot}co{dot}uk |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
The base is concrete, but on a slight slope which will obviously help the drainage. Also, the walls are 'dry stone walls' with no cement in between the bricks, which should help the drainage too. In which case you might suffer from over-drainage! I s'pose I could always put some cement in the gaps if there's too much drainage. Have to see how it goes. I'd be inclined to treat a walled bed much like a giant pot - so if you placed the spent compost at the very bottom you might end up clogging the drainage. Some light hardcore might be appropriate? I'll have a think - I've got a few broken bricks in there, but not many. The above factors might make drainage OK. Also, I over-estimated the depth of the beds in my first post - they are only just over a foot or so deep. So the 'large pot' scenario is probably the most appropriate here! I guess you'll have to play it by ear, but with such a shallow bed you might find it pays to install a seep hose halfway down the bed, or at least give some consideration to a semi-automatic watering system...which could be something as simple as a strategically punctured hose fitted round the rim of the bed. I have a water-butt, and the company which makes it also make a trickle-watering hose type system to go with it. I might invest in one of those for next year. I have today also coincidentally located a source for topsoil and manure - I've recently bought a wood-burning stove, and the place I found locally which supplies logs and kindling (went there today to stock up for the winter) also do the topsoil and manure. A one-stop shop! I'm planning on using the ash from the stove for the garden, too. Sounds like a fascinating project though - and if you designed the walls with some slots in, you could knock up some cloches/fleece frames to fit - which would help to extend the season. Now there's an idea . . . mini-polytunnels . . . I could plant some spuds in the autumn after the main veg are over, and have them fresh at Christmas! And use them in the spring too, to get nice big strong plants early in the year. Thanks for that one!!! I'm jealous already! And if you knock up an enviromesh frame you're never going to have to worry about a late frost knocking back your seedlings, nor the early blackfly season. Just done a Google search for enviromesh - first time I've heard of it. Looks like top stuff - I get lots of slugs and snails which hopefully it would keep off too. Had horrendous problems with them this year, what with the monsoon weather. Might have to be a beer moat otherwise! Thanks for all the help Stephen! Andy http://greencottage.burysolarclub.net |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
On Sun, 12 Sep 2004 18:44:22 GMT, "Andy Hunt"
wrote: The base is concrete, but on a slight slope which will obviously help the drainage. Also, the walls are 'dry stone walls' with no cement in between the bricks, which should help the drainage too. In which case you might suffer from over-drainage! I s'pose I could always put some cement in the gaps if there's too much drainage. Have to see how it goes. Sounds like a top idea! snip Just done a Google search for enviromesh - first time I've heard of it. Looks like top stuff - I get lots of slugs and snails which hopefully it would keep off too. Had horrendous problems with them this year, what with the monsoon weather. Might have to be a beer moat otherwise! Fleece can be a bit of a double-edged sword in that unless it's easy to lift off the crops, any pests trapped underneath it could have a field day! With a dry stone wall, the slugs and snails are simply going to find the holes! With a bit of judicial "hunt 'n peck" pest control I think you'll not have too many worries with slugs and snails. Like the sound of a beer moat though! Cheers, -- Stephen Howard - Woodwind repairs & period restorations http://www.shwoodwind.co.uk Emails to: showard{who is at}shwoodwind{dot}co{dot}uk |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
In article , Andy Hunt
writes I've recently bought a wood-burning stove, and the place I found locally which supplies logs and kindling (went there today to stock up for the winter) Good grief! You'll be a bit parky during the winter months then Andy! We have a woodburning stove in the lounge and we have a delivery of logs every 5 weeks or so. We also burn logs and other bits of wood from the garden and we know a carpenter who give us all his offcuts to save going down the dump. This JUST keeps us ticking over though if it gets really cold we have to go and get some coal! (Mind you the carpenter can be too helpful at times, I've had half a garage door and lintel on my driveway, to cut up and also two large rotten five bar gates -- Janet Tweedy Dalmatian Telegraph http://www.lancedal.demon.co.uk |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
I've recently bought a wood-burning stove, and the place I found locally which supplies logs and kindling (went there today to stock up for the winter) Good grief! You'll be a bit parky during the winter months then Andy! We have a woodburning stove in the lounge and we have a delivery of logs every 5 weeks or so. We also burn logs and other bits of wood from the garden and we know a carpenter who give us all his offcuts to save going down the dump. This JUST keeps us ticking over though if it gets really cold we have to go and get some coal! :-) I actually just bought a couple of £2 bags - I'm having the stove installed the week after next, and need some just to fire it up to make sure it's working OK. I'm going to get a bunker out the back for the bulk deliveries! The stove I've bought is a Morso "Dove Cleanheat 1630", which I've just today discovered is oversized for my terraced cottage. The bloke who's installing it has suggested that I put an extra radiator in my loft to get rid of some of the heat! What I'll probably do is line the firebox with bricks to make it smaller. But hopefully I won't be cold this winter! Thanks for the concern, though! Take care, Andy http://greencottage.burysolarclub.net |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
In article , Andy Hunt
writes The stove I've bought is a Morso "Dove Cleanheat 1630", which I've just today discovered is oversized for my terraced cottage. The bloke who's installing it has suggested that I put an extra radiator in my loft to get rid of some of the heat! What I'll probably do is line the firebox with bricks to make it smaller. But hopefully I won't be cold this winter! Thanks for the concern, though! Take care, Andy http://greencottage.burysolarclub.net We've got a Hunter stove, it can take 15 inch lengths of timber and burn coal as well. Very dry wood, I.e... Carpenters offcuts makes us go from the sublime to the blinking hot and we have to open the patio doors to let the the out as it burns hot and very fast Use cola every now and then because coal burns hotter and gets rid of a lot of tar etc on the glass doors. I was told this by the chimney sweep. We have the chimney swept at least once a year as we don't let the fire out, (it ticks over overnight and we burn stuff which might not be absolutely pristine firewood. E.g. five bar gates and so on. Goodness only knows what the Barracloughs burn given their propensity for discovering stuff in skips ) Could never be without the stove, it's wonderful and soothes the fire bug in me as you can keep adjusting it or put rubbish on it. It's alive and a boring regular never changing gas or electric thing would never suffice! The dogs usually take most of the worst heat away if too hot as you have to climb over them sometimes to get to the doors Can make the rooms more dirty though, you find more dust on the top of picture rails and curtain tracks if you ever feel obliged to look . janet -- Janet Tweedy Dalmatian Telegraph http://www.lancedal.demon.co.uk |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
We've got a Hunter stove, it can take 15 inch lengths of timber and burn coal as well. Very dry wood, I.e... Carpenters offcuts makes us go from the sublime to the blinking hot and we have to open the patio doors to let the the out as it burns hot and very fast I got the Hunter catalogue when I was looking at stoves - I really liked the design of them, but unfortunately I'm in a smokeless zone here, and Hunter don't make any 'clean burning' models for smokeless zones. The Dove is a nice looker, though - simple but good-looking. It has an image of a dove on a branch cast into each side of the stove (it's a nice solid cast iron - I think the Hunters are the same, aren't they). There's a place up the road from me selling these split logs at £2/bag, but I have a mate who's a builder, who quite often ends up with loads of spare wood at the end of a job. He says that from now on I'm welcome to take it, instead of his simply skipping it. Tomorrow I'm going down to one of his jobs where he's taken out a load of big old solid beams from a house - loads of them. I'll be taking my chain saw and making little oblong logs out of them. Getting a bunker made tomorrow too for my back garden/yard, so hopefully by the end of the day I'll end up with a bunker full of free firewood - a good start to the winter! Spent £60 on a chain saw though, but I won't need to spend that again, of course. Use cola every now and then because coal burns hotter and gets rid of a lot of tar etc on the glass doors. The Dove has quite a cunning design, in that the controllable air inlets for the fire are at the top of the front of the stove, so air is sucked in at the top and travels down the inside of the glass before feeding the fire from beneath. This means that there is a constant stream of air 'washing' the glass and keeping it clean. And all without electrical power! Could never be without the stove, it's wonderful and soothes the fire bug in me as you can keep adjusting it or put rubbish on it. It's alive and a boring regular never changing gas or electric thing would never suffice! I'm going to have the stove running my radiators and hot water cylinder, and a big reason for getting it is to do with my job - I work as an energy officer for my local council, and I'm currently promoting home renewable energy systems - which basically means 'biomass' heating (i.e. log stoves and boilers) for the winter, and rooftop solar thermal collectors to heat water in the summer - which remove the need to use any kind of boiler for half the year. But I must confess that I just really like the idea of having a real fire heating my home - there's nothing quite like it. And if all else fails, I could even cook on it too. Wood fuel - the original, and still the best . . . ! I was chatting to the marketing manager of Morso about doing a promotion, and it turned out he has the same stove as me. He assured me that I would soon 'develop a relationship' with my stove! I can certainly see it happening! Can make the rooms more dirty though, you find more dust on the top of picture rails and curtain tracks if you ever feel obliged to look . My house is still recovering from having a new fireplace built. Dust from that particular job still turns up in all sorts of unexpected places. I think that the extra few particles will be a small price to pay for a cheap, green, warm and homely heating system in my front room :-) Andy http://greencottage.burysolarclub.net |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
In article , Andy Hunt
writes Getting a bunker made tomorrow too for my back garden/yard, so hopefully by the end of the day I'll end up with a bunker full of free firewood - a good start to the winter! Spent £60 on a chain saw though, but I won't need to spend that again, of course. I would have thought that logs would take up a lot more room than coal, you'd have to have a pretty big bunker to keep sufficient wood to last you for a few weeks. Perhaps just a tarpaulin over the wood would be better? I'm going to have the stove running my radiators and hot water cylinder, That does take a lot of the heat away from the radiated amount into the room. I think that the extra few particles will be a small price to pay for a cheap, green, warm and homely heating system in my front room :-) Couldn't agree more! janet -- Janet Tweedy Dalmatian Telegraph http://www.lancedal.demon.co.uk |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
In article , Janet
Baraclough.. writes Also take care with burning joiners offcuts or demolition scavenges. Sometimes old reclaimed wood has been treated for worm or rot with toxic chemicals whose smoke I wouldn't want to breathe, some of it has been kilndried, and some of it is coniferous softwood. Kilndried offcuts burn so hot and fast it's hard to keep a pleasant steady heat in the room. Softwoods tend to tar the chimney, which can be a fire hazard. Janet. Good advice Janet, we've found it true in both cases Janet -- Janet Tweedy Dalmatian Telegraph http://www.lancedal.demon.co.uk |
#15
|
|||
|
|||
I would have thought that logs would take up a lot more room than coal, you'd have to have a pretty big bunker to keep sufficient wood to last you for a few weeks. Perhaps just a tarpaulin over the wood would be better? I'm limited in the room I have to store logs, I'm only in an end-terrace here in Bury, Lancs. Most of my back garden is taken up with plants and furniture. I just had a spare space under my window, so I've filled it with a 4'x3'x2' bunker. The wood I cut yesterday (aching all over now! Chainsaw very good though) has just filled it nicely to the brim. I will have to see how long it lasts me, it may be that I can make it last a while heating my modest 2-up 2-down. It's the first time I've tried this, so this winter will be a learning curve! Next year I'm hoping to stock up the bunker during the summer, and season some logs from the council wood tip if I can. I know that coal is much more energy dense, but I'm trying to be 'green' and 'carbon neutral' to see how the practicalities turn out . . . besides, I think it's going to be fun scavenging for wood - it would be good to see if I can get free fuel to last me the winter. I've already been promised the spare wood from a second big building job in a few weeks. I'm going to have the stove running my radiators and hot water cylinder, That does take a lot of the heat away from the radiated amount into the room. With the size of the stove I've bought, I think that might be a good thing! I'm after a room heater, not a sauna! I will let you know how it turns out - having it installed next weekend. Could be an interesting experience! Andy |
Reply |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Raised beds - really raised | Edible Gardening | |||
Raised beds - really raised | Edible Gardening | |||
Why are raised beds raised? | United Kingdom | |||
RAISED VEGETABLE GARDEN BEDS | Gardening | |||
Raised Beds Orientation? | Gardening |