With Covid in full swing by the end of March 2020, my seed business required an expansion. Along with expanding my seed selection, I needed to add a garden.
A
nearby family friend had a front yard that would be perfect for our
use, except for the fact that they had no garden in the front yard.
After talking with them about an idea, we settled on the idea that I
could use a little area in front of their porch to build two small
raised bed gardens in. The supplies would be easy to acquire from the
local hardware store. So I went to the sites, measured things, priced
supplies at the local hardware stores and brought the raised bed
supplies to the front yard. The raised bed garden is made out of blocks
and wood that are set into place with metal rebar going through the
center of the blocks.
One
of the funny parts of the whole experience was when I purchased the
wood frame. For the frame, I purchased long 2x6 cuts of lumber. The cuts
(probably 8’ long) were too long to fit in my van, so I used some
seatbelts, along with some of the raised bed cement blocks to hold the
back door of my van down so that I could transfer it to another friend’s
home so he could cut the wood for me. Fortunately, by the time I
purchased the wood I had already measured how tall a two blocks was, so I
knew that the beds would have to be at least three blocks tall in order
to support healthy summer plants.
The
first raised bed I filled up with mostly bagged compost from the
hardware store. After recognizing how expensive that was and how quickly
it would degrade (mostly decomposed wood chips), I purchased 3 cubic
yards of garden soil from a local supplier. They brought it in a truck
and dumped in onto the driveway, where I slowly worked to fill in the
raised beds until I had no more room. Then I used a wheelbarrow to
transfer the rest of the compost the half block back to my backyard.
By the time everything was said and done, I had spent a lot of money, but then I had the whole season of sun to work with.
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