Saturday, April 4, 2009

The first garden bed is done!!!

It's been a few months coming but finally we finished one garden bed today! It's a small step but a significant one in that it is a move in the right direction.

We have recently bought a house with a little bit of space out the back and we have been talking (a lot) about doing something constructive with it. We've been reading so many blogs .... the Greening of Gavin and Down to Earth are two that have particularly inspired us...and last weekend we actually stopped talking about it and made a start - sometimes the hardest part. 

We have decided on the no-dig vegetable garden so we headed off to Bunnings (while not the ideal choice we feel like such newbies we wanted to be able to ask advice if we needed to) for some redgum sleepers, some coach bolts to hold the beds together and a drill bit to get through the hardwood. Our original plan was to make two beds of 2.4m x 1.2m  as a beginning, but we discovered almost too late that 2.4m length sleepers were not going to fit in the car! Desperate to make a start we quickly rethought the plan and went for two beds of 1.2m x 1.2m. We do have space for more but we have to clear some room and we figure that we can use these first couple of beds as a bit of trial and error.

While I would like to boast that we put the framework together quickly and easily, the truth is that the first bed took us an hour and a half . We discovered that the Bunnings Man had advised us to get the wrong size drill bit and so we scrounged around at home and found the right size bit in a cheap set found in the shed - a lesson learnt that $11 on one drill bit is not necessarily the way to go nor is blindly taking advice from the Bunnings Man.



The second bed took us half an hour so I reckon we 'll get it down to twenty minutes easy - eventually. This is what we ended up with:




Today we filled one bed. We started with a layer of newspaper, then a 5 cm layer of sugar cane mulch. We added some concentrated dynamic lifter pellets and watered it in well. Next came a layer of cow manure, and then a layer of mushroom compost. We started the layering with the mulch again, dynamic lifter, cow manure and compost. Our sleepers are only 100m high so that was enough to almost fill them.



We want to grow our stuff from seeds eventually but we bought a kick-start pack from Bunnings of cabbage, broccoli and cauliflower. Finally we topped off our bed with a protective layer of bird netting...with two dogs who luurve rolling in dynamic lifter and birds that adore sifting through mulch for worms we figured this was the easiest way to get around both problems. 

Here's the final product. It may not look like much but we're pretty excited!




5 comments:

Unknown said...

What a wonderful start to your change in direction. I am so proud of you both.

The garden beds look great. I think I will have to get some netting to keep Holly out of my beds. She has no restraint or control when it comes to good smelling organic fertilizer either!

Gav

greenfumb said...

Great work, what lovely wood you chose. We have Ecowood but it doesn't look anywhere near as nice.

Silver Rookie said...

Is ecowood expensive? We like the look of the redgum too but it is a bit pricey especially from Bunnings...there is probably a cheaper place and we are certainly looking to tap into some networks for things like that

greenfumb said...

I think it was quite cheap, from Australian Native Landscapes, but it was my birthday present so I don't know for sure.

Try the local tip for recycled stuff but it would be more difficult to know whether or not it had been treated.

Anonymous said...

These beds look fabulous!