Тёмный

Raised Beds Versus In Ground Gardening-- Which is better? 

Growfully with Jenna
Подписаться 166 тыс.
Просмотров 40 тыс.
50% 1

It's the great garden debate-- raised beds versus in ground gardening! This video covers the pros & cons of each style of gardening, what I personally prefer and a raised bed garden mistake to avoid.
Penn State article on using treated lumber in the garden-- extension.psu.edu/environment...
Some of the links included here are affiliate links, which means I earn a small commission on qualifying purchases at no cost to you. I will only recommend items I love and should you choose to make a purchase, it helps support the channel! Thank you! 💚
Hortisketch Garden Planner and Garden Manager (use my code JENNA5 for $5 off) - gardensavvy.com
My favorite, long-lasting seed starting trays: allaboutthegarden.com/?sca_re...
RX Soil Testing (use my code “growfully” for 10% off your order): rxsoil.com/nutrients?source=g...
North Spore Premium Mushroom Starting Supplies (use my code GROWFULLY for 10% off):
northspore.sjv.io/Nke3Q2
HISEA Gardening Boots shareasale.com/r.cfm?b=207008...
Use discount code 𝐉𝐞𝐧𝐧𝐚𝟏𝟓 for 15% off all HISEA products
Dripworks Irrigation: www.dripworks.com/?ref=Growfully
Omlet Chicken Coops and Supplies: www.omlet.us/shop/chicken_kee...
A.M. Leonard Horticultural Tool & Supply: amleo.idevaffiliate.com/184.html
Growfully Amazon Storefront (products I use): www.amazon.com/shop/growfully...
00:00 Intro
00:23 Pros of Raised Beds
02:49 Cons of Raised Beds
06:27 A word on treated lumber in the garden
09:11 Pros of In-Ground Beds
13:07 Cons of In-Ground Beds
15:13 Which style do I prefer? And how do I utilize both types of beds?
15:55 A raised bed mistake

Опубликовано:

 

2 июн 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 266   
@gmansecond4103
@gmansecond4103 Месяц назад
Thanks for NOT trying to sell us a metal raised bed. Almost all garden youtubers are trying to sell something these days.
@JS-hk3lv
@JS-hk3lv Месяц назад
I swear she's got the most genuine smile out of any RU-vidr.
@GrowfullywithJenna
@GrowfullywithJenna Месяц назад
I'm not 100% sold on the metal beds yet. I have one that's been sitting here for 2 years that I need to set up & try out, so we'll see how that goes.
@NicolaiAAA
@NicolaiAAA Месяц назад
I don't mind them trying to sell them, I really like the idea, but they all make it sound soooooooo easy to just go find a whole bunch of logs and haul those in to fill most of the bed. Or the last video from the NJ guy it was partially decomposed wood chips. I mean, ok great, but he had a friend who literally had a pile of that for him to take. Where are the rest of us gonna get a huge pile of partially composted wood chips?? I think the smartest idea I saw in the comments was someone who used bales of straw (or hay? I forget) to fill most of the beds, which seemed like the best way to do it. But yeah, that's always been my issue. The expense of the beds themselves and the expense of filling them.
@65stang98
@65stang98 Месяц назад
@@NicolaiAAA just sign up for chip drop its free. Then let them decompose.
@meghankenworthy2903
@meghankenworthy2903 Месяц назад
⁠​⁠@@JS-hk3lv for real, it’s contagious! I had the pleasure of meeting her sister a couple years ago, and she has the same genuine and contagious smile.
@suzetterobinson9442
@suzetterobinson9442 19 дней назад
We've tried all the methods - in ground, till, no-till, strawbale, raised beds, Ruth Stout, Mittlieder, Back to Eden, Hugelkulture, etc. Zone 5, heavy clay, or sand. And watering is also my least favorite gardening task. Extreme deer, rabbit and small rodent pressure plus other pests and invaders. My husband and I are getting older and our children are grown so we are starting to add some more raised beds to the garden. We've been trying to convert a large lawn to a permaculture homestead for over 10 years with not nearly the results we should be having. We are adding high raised beds in one part of the garden for early season starting, plants that struggle in our heavy clay (I have never successfully grown carrots :( ) and to help with pest pressure. We are using hugelkulture for filling, topping with leaf mold, poultry litter and good growing mediums. Most of our farm is in ground - very hilly clay. Adding some raised beds will allow us to get high production for annual and some perennial crops while we continue to work on amending the remaining acreage.
@user-ef1vs1nt4o
@user-ef1vs1nt4o Месяц назад
One of the things I hear most raised bed enthusiasts repeat endlessly is how the beds warm quicker in spring which extends their growing season. That's only half true. Granted, they DO warm quicker. However, the variables which allow them to warm quicker in the spring also allow them to cool quicker in the fall. In reality, the net gain in growing season is zero. So, what they've actually done is move their growing season a few weeks earlier, rather than actually making it longer. Plus, that ability to warm quicker also allows the beds to overheat very quickly in midsummer, which can be deadly for roots. I've listened to a lot of people on both sides of the issue, and truthfully, enthusiasts from each side tend to exaggerate benefits and downplay cons. My ultimate conclusion is that the only real benefit to me personally for raised beds is one of accessibility. I'm in my late 60's and getting up and down is much more of a chore than it once was. But that benefit requires more watering. I don't mind watering so much, so I'm willing to pay that price.
@amac9245
@amac9245 Месяц назад
Zone 4 - Raised beds are a must. They give me 6-8 weeks of additional growing season. I utilized free pallet untreated wood + linseed oil + 6mm poly sheet liner stapled and tuck taped in combination with free city compost + manure + Hügelkultur and natural clay soil . Topped with local straw and leaf mulch = amazing results!
@ryanmorris9141
@ryanmorris9141 11 дней назад
I try to mimic nature where there are no raised beds but also appreciate raised beds for easy access
@illustr8life863
@illustr8life863 Месяц назад
We went from a 2500 square ft in ground garden to a 576 square ft garden with 21 inch high raised beds and proper paved paths, and will never look back. Clay, boulders, weeds, bugs, sweat, tears, sore backs, bites, annual sapling digging, with little to show for it at the end of the year due to pest pressure became too much. I LOVE my tiny walled garden with less than 1/2 the work and lots of produce to show for it! With intensive planting we get enough of the things we eat for the year and even have soft fruit and dwarf orchard with 5 fruit trees. My peaches are peaching on year 2! Very excited about the ease and pure joy of raised bed gardening. Do what works for you.
@bjones8354
@bjones8354 Месяц назад
Buying quality soil or compost is such a challenge. Spending a lot is no guarentee of getting a great product. Great video, TY!
@GrowfullywithJenna
@GrowfullywithJenna Месяц назад
It really is!
@brianczuhai8909
@brianczuhai8909 Месяц назад
Buying soil is a dirty business! I do get triple shredded mulch for $30/yd. I use that and winter composed leaves for mulch. It acts like decomposed wood chips and both seem to incorporate into the soli by the end of the season.
@eric3434
@eric3434 Месяц назад
Tried the free county compost and mulch facility? Slamming good stuff. Mushroom city in 2 weeks,
@eric3434
@eric3434 Месяц назад
For red clay native soil: In-ground. Big and deep, bathtub effect. Sloped bottom (or V bottom) , with a french drain on the lowest side (or in the center with a V bottom). Filled with rich free county compost, and a bit of the red clay from the surface, tilled heavy. Rowed mounds. A couple pounds of white rice scattered about. Covered with 2" of 100% compost. Than pelletized gypsum scattered about. And initially watered down with some molasses water. Install drip irrigation (drip tips not really needed as long as its got a timer). And a thick 8"+ matt of mulch piled on the top.
@karenfrankland7763
@karenfrankland7763 Месяц назад
We live on top of a ridge line with heavy clay soil. 20 years in and we can dig down well over a foot before hitting the clay line. Over the years we have tilled , added in shredded leaves, grass clippings, decomposing wood chips, homemade compost rich with chicken, duck, quail manure and pine bedding. Rabbit poo goes directly on the soil surface in the garden beds. Heavily mulch all veggie beds with shredded leaves and grass clippings as well as shredded paper/cardboard. Thick layers of cardboard and wood chips in all the pathways. Red Wigglers galore throughout our backyard. We have shallow raised beds just for containing the soil. We also companion plant and plant intensively for little to no weeds. The chickens and ducks have full access to all the garden beds in the late fall and winter when we dump lots of kitchen scraps and shredded leaves on all the veggie beds. They do the work of turning it in for us.
@Gardenfnp
@Gardenfnp Месяц назад
I’ve been working hard on amending my native soil over the past two years. Each year I learn something new and it continues to Improve. You have been so helpful and encouraging. Thank you for sharing all you have learned.
@GrowfullywithJenna
@GrowfullywithJenna Месяц назад
I'm so glad to hear that you're seeing improvements in your native soil-- that's very exciting!
@lindag4484
@lindag4484 Месяц назад
I was very fortunate with my raised bed soil. It was from a guy who was clearing a section of his large, wooded property and the soil was rich in clean, organic matter. He had horses and chickens and brought some composted manure and dumped that in, along with the soil. In the years after, I have supplemented with worm castings, compost, and OMRI cert, supplements. I love my raised beds! I'm in Zone 5 and have nearly inch tall (cold tolerant) lettuce that I direct seeded the last day of March, then we got a foot of early spring snow that was of no consequence. It will be ready late May. I have your RU-vid channel to thank for many of my successes!
@GrowfullywithJenna
@GrowfullywithJenna Месяц назад
What a wonderful resource for soil!!
@JeanneKinland
@JeanneKinland Месяц назад
Good point about types of plants. We use both in ground and raised beds. Our deep rooted plants like tomatoes and peppers go in ground. the onions, garlic and invasive herbs go in raised beds.
@ebradley2306
@ebradley2306 Месяц назад
My issue with raised beds is the dropping soil level every year. In my hot, humid climate organic material breaks down very quickly. Topping up is a requirement many don't talk about. Have annuals in raised beds and perennials in in-ground beds. Make my own compost, leaf mold and vermicompost.
@GrowfullywithJenna
@GrowfullywithJenna Месяц назад
That is a really good point! Mine require topping up about every 2 years.
@kmoecub
@kmoecub Месяц назад
In your case I'd recommend building your raised beds to function in the same way that containers do. Have no contact with the underlying soil, but make sure to add worms and some of the underlying soil into your beds to promote a healthy biome. I'd also recommend using slow-decomposing organic matter in the lower part of the beds to maintain bulk and prevent needing to top off so often.
@ebradley2306
@ebradley2306 Месяц назад
@@kmoecub My beds are purposefully directly on the underlying clay soil. That soil is slowly being loosened up by roots and worms of which the beds are chock full. I periodically add topsoil from the surrounding yard to the beds to provide permanent structure to the bed mixture. Thought the podcaster would have an idea or 2.
@NevadaGoats
@NevadaGoats 27 дней назад
@@ebradley2306 Yep. Here in the high desert mine drop every year too. The humus simply burns up. Fortunately I have an unlimited supply of goat and horse manure and spoiled alfalfa I add every season. Otherwise I would have nothing but sand. All my raised beds are full of red wigglers as well. Sand just blows in so I do'nt have to add any myself LOL.
@cherylmcnaughton7287
@cherylmcnaughton7287 24 дня назад
I top mine with compost or a mix yearly. I have done both methods and our native soil is super poor - raised beds are hands down the best method for us. We have enriched it for years and they grow a lot more than potatoes - which is what was grown here years ago.
@jerryleopold1430
@jerryleopold1430 Месяц назад
I collected old privacy fencing that people around town were replacing with new. Built my raised beds with 3 layers of the old dog ear slats and lineds the sides with 4mil plastic. They are holding up well.
@jonthebeau4653
@jonthebeau4653 Месяц назад
I’m in zone 6a also and I also grow both in ground and in raised beds. I prefer the raised beds because there are so fewer weeds. I will water all day long if I don’t have go pull weeds.
@GrowfullywithJenna
@GrowfullywithJenna Месяц назад
I'd rather pull weeds... I suspect I'm an outlier in that 😄
@BackyardProduce
@BackyardProduce Месяц назад
@@GrowfullywithJennaSame here. With my new in-ground beds I can weed almost on my own schedule since the weeds usually aren’t an urgent issue. I can’t do that with watering small raised beds or containers. On a large scale, watering manually takes hours, multiple times a week. Now if the weeds are in the default clay, that’s different. But once I put compost on top it’s easier just sow densely & pull often enough to weaken the weeds over time. When I was a kid I had to water across maybe 5 acres manually. I do not recommend that to any gardener.
@YarrowPressburg
@YarrowPressburg Месяц назад
I love watering, very relaxing and I get a good look at everything,and I pull out a few weeds as I go. Thanks for a great video!
@WhatWeDoChannel
@WhatWeDoChannel Месяц назад
I could have made that exact comment!😊
@BRANDYHAMILTONS
@BRANDYHAMILTONS Месяц назад
I absolutely 💯 agree... I also talk to my lovely living plants as I water them ❤😊
@ReapingTheHarvest
@ReapingTheHarvest Месяц назад
Until summer when it's 100F outside 🥵
@DebRoo11
@DebRoo11 Месяц назад
It's all fun for a small garden in nice weather until you have many gardens, a full time job and its 100° out 😅 I get the sentiment but its not always practical to hand water
@WhatWeDoChannel
@WhatWeDoChannel Месяц назад
@@DebRoo11 of course you are right, everyone’s situation is different. My garden is small (but very productive), and here in Southern Ontario it just about never gets that hot 🥵! I do love being out in the garden though.
@brianwhite9555
@brianwhite9555 16 дней назад
In our zone 6a garden in SE MI, we have to use raised beds because the native dark clay soil drains so poorly. I always recommend lining a new raised bed with two layers of overlapping cardboard to act as a weed barrier for the first growing season, and after planting mulch with partially rotted leaves or chopped straw. This will help keep the soil moist & cool, suppress weeds, and break down during the season to replenish nutrients in the soil. After cleaning beds out at end of season, add another layer of leaf mulch for the winter. We also make our own compost and use it liberally with all plantings.
@WesternMONo-TillGardening
@WesternMONo-TillGardening Месяц назад
I definitely prefer my permanent in ground beds to my raised beds. Besides the watering issue, I find raised beds a little awkward to work in (they're too wide for my short arms).
@johnjude2685
@johnjude2685 Месяц назад
Easy tomato method place five tomato cages into a circle measure 3 feet center to center in a location you want to raise 5 tomato plants the following season. Place a couple giant sunflowers and allow one to grow in the center of the cages had been when setting the area up. Them giant sunflowers are going to have a beneficial root ball that is the cover crop that is where the tomato seedlings will thrive the second season I've done this and last year in our Columbus spring drought these out produce several other methods in growing tomato with 1/3 my work effort. I'm 72 trying to find the easiest way that works great I seen your huge sunflowers try placing in a few tomato seedlings into last year's sunflowers root ball without disturbing the root balls Thanks 👍 Jenna this is a way any one that can get into the garden can have great tomato plants. I'm raising five in a circle in the taller tomato cages then tie cages so to prevent wind damage have stakes in 3 to help hold and working great
@GrowfullywithJenna
@GrowfullywithJenna Месяц назад
Great tip, John!
@dhaniaboodoo7042
@dhaniaboodoo7042 Месяц назад
Thank you for keeping it real and not trying to sell stuff!👍🙏💕
@aimeesgardens
@aimeesgardens Месяц назад
My husband fell a couple of cedar trees and cut them down to size and made me raised beds out of them. Basically the only cost was the hardware to put together and the soil. (We have a Christmas tree farm so we have plenty of trees to spare) They have lasted for years and are so pretty. Anywho, we didn't have a lot to spend on the garden and I wanted to share in case anyone else could use the idea.
@GrowfullywithJenna
@GrowfullywithJenna Месяц назад
Great tip!!
@jeanpauldupuis
@jeanpauldupuis Месяц назад
Debris will naturally blow off the beds and into the 'gutters' between them if you fill them flush to the brim. You can easily run a rake below the 'curb' of the bed and clear all the debris in one gesture without disturbing the plantings. If you leave a well, debris will stack deeply in the beds, forming a kind of stagnant zone around the base of your plants. I keep my beds mulched to the very brim with leaf mold and compost, topping up weekly or as needed. The squirrels do not cooperate with my meticulous manicuring, but I do it anyway.
@michaelhornyak7506
@michaelhornyak7506 Месяц назад
Hi Jenna, I am in Ohio also a few miles from Lake Erie I am in a condo but its unique its a cape cod styls two units per building, Have a flower bed that about 100 feet that goes around the building. OMG the clay is horrible. I use an auger and make many holes and put old potting mix and buy a couple of bags of garden soil after 3 years its much better. Backyard have a garden that goes around the patio. Tomato plans and flowers
@loulauer5853
@loulauer5853 Месяц назад
Thanks for the video. It was very informative. I also have a mix of raised and in-ground. Being a late 60's gardener, my raised (more raised than normal) beds are a big plus side physically for me.
@Matt_K68
@Matt_K68 Месяц назад
I live in Georgia and my garden would get so muddy with standing water, I had to go to raised beds. I used pressure treated boards after researching the type of chemicals they use nowadays. I feel OK with having them contacting my vegetables.
@lindacgrace2973
@lindacgrace2973 Месяц назад
I'm in the mountains of Arizona, Zone 7b. I don't suffer the scorching heat of Phoenix, but we only get 16" of rain per year, ALL of it in August. I use Australian wicking beds. Make the bottom foot or so of the bed water proof, fill with coarse rock and gravel, cover the rock with weed cloth (or, in my case, old, thin used carpet rescued out of a dumpster), and put 16" - 18" of soil on top. Fill the reservoir with water. You have to top water when planting, and especially when planting seeds, but once the plants are established, their roots wick up enough water through the soil. It's a self-regulating system: never too much and never too little water. I go out and fill the reservoirs about every ten days. Virtually no weeds, absolutely no burrowing animals, easy table-top working height for me (I'm retired, now). It's worked out well for me.
@mamanash100
@mamanash100 Месяц назад
My raised beds started with native clay soil that I added organic matter to every year. The first year I added top soil, peat, and bagged manure, then turned with a shovel. The 3rd year I added gypsum along with other organic amendments. The gypsum made a huge difference in that it finally broke down the clumps of clay. I've been gardening in the same beds for 25 years. Each year I add compost. This year, a friend had a large quantity of aged cow manure that I added, I can't wait to see what that does to my harvest.
@Mastadex
@Mastadex Месяц назад
Raised beds are great for sloped terrain, like my back yard. I had in-ground beds the year before but one heavy rain and it all slid downhill! I opted for metal beds. EDIT: I bought my soil from a company that had a soil test available on their website. This is a sign of a good company.
@GrowfullywithJenna
@GrowfullywithJenna Месяц назад
Do you mind sharing which company that was?
@Mastadex
@Mastadex Месяц назад
@@GrowfullywithJenna a place called Kettle Lake Soil in Cambridge Ontario. Their website has a number of soil tests you can look at. Last one was in 2021, which is when I purchased the soil.
@sunitashastry5270
@sunitashastry5270 Месяц назад
I do both kinds of beds like you, for some of th same reasons. It ps good you mentioned the weed cloth barrier mistake. Poeple do not realize that what makes a good garden is good soil - for which we depend on a lot of critters and microorganisms.
@craigdreisbach5956
@craigdreisbach5956 Месяц назад
Dear Jenna. Thank you for all the time and effort you [put into your videos. Like you I have both raised beds and open ground. I also had the same experience with weed fabric. What a mess. One thought about oak for raised beds. White oak is very rot resistant and has been used for centuries for the keels and planking of ships and boats. However, red oak is just the opposite, even though its more readily available. Even red oak that is coated (varnish/wood preservative) won't last more than 3-4 years. As always, Kind Regards. Craig
@GrowfullywithJenna
@GrowfullywithJenna Месяц назад
Thanks for the info on the various oaks-- I had no idea!
@shawnueda8909
@shawnueda8909 Месяц назад
Hi Jenna, getting free manure from local farmer can be dicey! If the livestock were fed feed treated with Graze On (pyralid based herbicide) The manure even if composted will destroy your peas, tomatoes etc. So be very careful if you want free manure or compost. Best wood for framing a raised bed is black locust (if you can get it). Old saying about black locust "It will last longer than your soil" Black locust is also very hard on cutting blades on your power tool. It will eat your chainsaw blade. Black locust fence post will last over 50 years in many environment whereas, cedar, red wood, cypress may only last 15-20 years. Great info very entertaining for me.
@dacgardens
@dacgardens Месяц назад
Jenna: Thanks for this pros/cons video. I'm a newbie to gardening, and a practical kind of gal. Raised beds look nice, but no can do this year. Maybe a few in the future. I have access to small fallen trees. Going to sink them as a border and space beds about 32 inches apart. Have a 1986 Toro 32" riding mower. Will use some of the clippings for compost, some for mulch. Going for the rustic look without the mud, or need for wood chips. Cordless weed whacker should keep all looking tidy. Tip: I attached a frog spear (Wal-Mart $4.99) to an old mop handle. Makes a super, no bending, onion ringer!
@JulesGardening
@JulesGardening Месяц назад
Hello there Jenna! Good to see you. I am about five minutes and wish to share something with you and anyone reading this. I completed an extension program last year and the instructor has raised beds that have no constructed materials on the boarder. They are about knee high and in 4x20 rows. The paths are 3 feet wide and covered in straw. So basically the beds are raised between paths. He uses constant composting to keep them healthy. Sort of like hugukulture, but not. I guess it is a best of row gardening with raised bed gardening....and path control. :) Per the wood, same thing with "cinder" blocks. Those are no longer made to my knowledge. Jamie
@user-mb6ef9yu6j
@user-mb6ef9yu6j 15 дней назад
When my cedar raised beds need repair, I cut off the piece of the bed that is broken and save it to make smaller beds. Often use them for smaller plants like herbs or when I want to experiment with a new vegetable that I hadn’t grown before and only want to grow one or two.
@franksinatra1070
@franksinatra1070 Месяц назад
That was a good breakdown of pros and cons. I have access to a lot of medium size logs from trees that have come down in my yard over the years so I've been using them more lately to frame out a spot and top it off with compost which I guess can be considered a hybrid approach. It's cheap and easy and seems to be working for me.
@GrowfullywithJenna
@GrowfullywithJenna Месяц назад
I'm considering doing this as well-- so many ash trees down in our woods due to ash vine borer!
@justsomeguy6133
@justsomeguy6133 Месяц назад
One thing you left out is simply the time and labor involved in setting up raised beds. With my large in-ground garden, if I were to switch to raised beds, it would be a season-long project itself. I am blessed with good native soil. It’s a well drained loam, all it needed was some lime and compost (it’s naturally rather acidic, pH around 5).
@QuiteQuietASMR
@QuiteQuietASMR Месяц назад
Wild!!! We have completely sandy soil here in southern Indiana and I could water every single day and not have an issue.
@nlboyd7647
@nlboyd7647 Месяц назад
fellow Ohioan here. I used a mix of raised bed, hugelkultur, and in ground with mounded rows. Over the past few years I have figured out what grows best for me with the 3 different methods and I see a benefit to all of them. Yes there are cons to each, but I have found that once you learn what grows best with each method in your area the cons are very minimal. I love that I get different results for each type, and it allows me to grow more with less work and less intrusion on nature itself.
@lindaminor1985
@lindaminor1985 Месяц назад
I am in zone 6 ny. I only watered my front flower bed 1 time last year. It's heavily mulched.
@michaelhaines9172
@michaelhaines9172 18 дней назад
I’m in Southern Ohio and all my gardening is in raised beds. Some 12” tall some 36”. My main reason for strictly using raised beds is that majority of prime gardening real estate is all septic system areas.
@ceedee2570
@ceedee2570 Месяц назад
mixed approach because it depends...
@johnanderson3405
@johnanderson3405 Месяц назад
I have a ph of only 5 in my back yard. Ended up building a couple raised beds for strawberries. I used 2x4’s for a frame and got some used metal roofing panels for the sides. Working out great. They’re 4 feet tall so no critters are getting in except the birds. Easy on the back too. Thanks for the good advice
@DebRoo11
@DebRoo11 Месяц назад
I built 8 of this this year as well except halved the panels for all but two of the beds. I think they look great too
@debrathert
@debrathert Месяц назад
I do like my 4 x 8 foot raised beds (cheap ones, like yours!), but one of the cons you didn't mention is one that I've experienced. I have my raised beds in the vicinity of some large ash trees. The beds are in the sun, but the roots from the trees have totally found the nice rich, damp soil I provide for my vegetables. These are not the huge roots, but the small hair-like, fine roots that the trees put out to find water....and they definitely found it. This year, even though I try to practice no til gardening, I totally dug up all 5 beds and tried to rid the beds of these roots. The beds were to the point that when I would dig down into the beds, it was almost a solid mass of roots. I did get them in good shape for now, but I expect that I will be back in the same boat in a few years. I did have some hardware cloth on the bottom of several of them to keep out the moles, but these finer roots still made their way through the hardware cloth. Any suggestions would be appreciated!!! Thanks for your channel.
@richardsedgwick1113
@richardsedgwick1113 Месяц назад
Thanks Jenna. Here in SoCal, 10a, your information was very useful. Raised bed just use too much water that is expensive! I’m have moved to an 1 1/2 acre lot that was once part of a citrus orchard. The soil is sandy and drains well. In ground is going to be best for me. I will however have a raised bed for carrots. Happy Gardening
@flatsville9343
@flatsville9343 Месяц назад
I have in bed for long crops. Raised beds for primarily annual veg. I use acutal dirt in my raised beds rather than be compost & added nutient dependent. I generally dig out 12 inches down on the foot print of a new raised bed & reserve the dirt. Fill the hole with rotten logs & branches, add compostable greens & browns & top with reserved dirt. I then put on a layer of compost, vermicast & mulch. By year 2 they perform really well. Watering needs have been drastically reduced due to the sunken rotten logs which stay hydreated as water flows through & around them below grade.
@tomw4338
@tomw4338 Месяц назад
I don’t have a lot of garden space, so raised beds for me. I plan to try out in ground gardening if I move to a bigger plot of land. I bit the bullet and bought cedar for my beds, and they’ve gone 3 years without any rot. Way more expensive but no hassle.
@backpacker2417
@backpacker2417 Месяц назад
Thanks for a another great video. I just built a raised garden bed today. I did build it 12 foot x 24 inches deep and just the wood and screws came up to $280 for one bed. You mentioned contaminates and I found out that most of yard has old asphalt buried about 6 - 8 inches under the top soil. Years ago, an asphalt contactor owned this place and it looks like discarded asphalt was used to level the yard. I will add the hardware cloth per your suggestion before I fill.
@DebRoo11
@DebRoo11 Месяц назад
I made 8 beds with wood frames and corregated roof panels. The panels are $18 each and take 10-15 yrs to break down at least. Saves a lot on wood but still looks nice
@GrowfullywithJenna
@GrowfullywithJenna Месяц назад
Oh no!! I'm amazed sometimes at what folks find buried in their yards! But I'm glad you were able to build a raised bed in this case!
@MissCarey1420-yf5ev
@MissCarey1420-yf5ev 21 день назад
Thanks for the information. I don’t know what’s in my soil. I started a flower garden this spring. I amended my soil and threw my rose bushes in there. Practicing how my direct sow flowers will come out. I don’t have any blooms but I love the greenery. I enjoy planting. I don’t have any raised beds but thinking about get one or two with legs for vegetables and herbs soon. I have potted plants as well. I do believe and thanks for the tip of compost and other soils to amend the natural soil around my house. Blessings… tfs
@outdooorsman
@outdooorsman Месяц назад
i am inground all the way although i do have a few pots with greens and onions in them
@sammyboyde6489
@sammyboyde6489 Месяц назад
If you have any Amish in the area, there is probably a sawmill around. Rough cut oak is usually much less expensive than big box lumber, and bigger in dimension. Heavy, especially when wet...
@GrowfullywithJenna
@GrowfullywithJenna Месяц назад
Great tip!
@christophergetchell6490
@christophergetchell6490 Месяц назад
I do mostly in ground gardening although I actually raised the surface of the soil quite a few inches with a blend of compost and native soil. In my enclosed keyhole bed, I employed Hügelkultur and I rarely have to water it. I do have a couple of smaller raised beds and do some significant containers scattered around the place! I do use drip irrigation but I don't supply it with the town water, but pumped water from a retention pond I built as a feature.
@johnjude2685
@johnjude2685 Месяц назад
If I do a raise bed, I'll do the concrete with the molds and keep it only 10 inches just for having great walkways. I'm 72, so after being set up, the cement should last my lifetime My wife picked up some stinky "topsoil from Lowe's smell like sewage. I'm with you about raise in ground beds as for watering and need for drainage for my claybase soil as yourself. Thanks. Received my email saying you like the bag for carrying seedlings from our basement. It's for safety, make a short video, and teach everyone thanks
@justinarnold7725
@justinarnold7725 13 дней назад
I like and usually grow in ground but when we moved to the new house we found under the two inches of topsoil was several metres of dried out potters grade clay soil so we had to go with metal garden beds for a quick fix because it is going to take years to reform the clay soil and many truck loads of compost material to get the ground ready for growing
@jms9057
@jms9057 25 дней назад
When wood prices skyrocketed, I added "beds" in kiddie pools. Worked amazingly well! Tomatoes, peppers, kale, squashes, etc., all did fantastic. Four years later, and the pools are still intact (aside from the side drainage holes I drilled) despite the baking NC sun. Raised beds don't have to be expensive, and the bonus with kiddie pools is that I can move them around whenever I want.
@GrowfullywithJenna
@GrowfullywithJenna 25 дней назад
Great tip- thanks for sharing!
@brandynash1409
@brandynash1409 21 день назад
We do raised beds, “raised bed” in ground, and in ground gardening. All for different reasons with different plants. They all work great!
@originalwoolydragon8387
@originalwoolydragon8387 Месяц назад
I wish I could do more in ground gardening, but my native soil layer is so shallow & compacted. My favorite thing about raised beds is that they are not as far down as the ground; my back definitely prefers them...
@tomst9417
@tomst9417 Месяц назад
When I first started my vegetable garden I used in ground beds. We have a lot of rocks in the soil here and weed pressure is high, so three years ago I installed 4' x 10' x 8" high raised beds. I put down cardboard then filled with top soil and compost from a local garden center. I do wish I had installed hardware cloth since we have gophers. I like the neat appearance of the raised beds and the soil warms up faster and I find weeds easier to manage. I add compost every spring and last fall I planted cover crops in some of the beds. I plan to keep using the raised beds.
@angelaforsyth1092
@angelaforsyth1092 13 дней назад
when she says kill off the grass (to start a garden) she does not mean with chemical weed killers. One great way to do it is pile on some cardboard in the fall and by spring you've got a beautiful spot to plant.
@carissalizotte8977
@carissalizotte8977 Месяц назад
I like both styles of beds. I try to do more in ground beds with no till high compost methods. We also have clay (southern Maine) but I am now on year 4 of my in ground beds and they have really progressed in soil quality with thoughtful growing and adding lots of organic material. Only thing is with my in ground beds I struggle much more with weeds and grasses creeping in.
@roccoconte2960
@roccoconte2960 Месяц назад
Great video, I love my raised beds I've had them for over 30 yrs. I made them from pressure treated lumber and covered the inside with ridge 1/2inch insulation .
@WhatWeDoChannel
@WhatWeDoChannel Месяц назад
Thank you, this was thoughtful and thorough look at this topic!
@GrowfullywithJenna
@GrowfullywithJenna Месяц назад
Glad you enjoyed it!
@thetinker3924
@thetinker3924 Месяц назад
Thank you for the information. QUESTION? We have added peat moss and not the soil is nice and soft. One person said don't use peat moss but it works great for us. No raised garden here. Too hot!
@cherryjuice9946
@cherryjuice9946 Месяц назад
In Florida, soil drains very well, so in-ground planting is never muddy. The only advantage I can think of for a raised bed in our soil is that when it rains, all those little weed seeds don't wash into the beds. It's easier to keep a raised bed weed free simply because seeds don't wash up.
@GrowfullywithJenna
@GrowfullywithJenna Месяц назад
You have the opposite problem that I do here!
@julie-annepineau4022
@julie-annepineau4022 Месяц назад
Lol, I think remembering when to say in ground and when to say raised bed was a tongue twister that day! I grow in ground (or on ground since they are well mounded) I have sandy clay soil that I have been adding lots of organic material to. I am just in my 3rd year at this location but have changed the bed arrangement each year as I try to figure out what works best for me and the location.
@GrowfullywithJenna
@GrowfullywithJenna Месяц назад
Haha- it was indeed!
@happyhobbit8450
@happyhobbit8450 Месяц назад
I live on the west side of the Rocky mountains so we 'Grow Rocks' . . . we also have trees which are excellent to make soil. Mostly it's a matter of removing the rocks and adding compost and amendments. Thank you for the comparison
@NicolaiAAA
@NicolaiAAA Месяц назад
I did the square foot garden thing, but I didn't want to limit my plants and wanted to improve my soil in the end, so I used cardboard as my weed blocker, and then used a blend of peat moss (I've since switched out to coco coir), vermiculite, and compost. The plants have been all pretty happy with that, though my biggest issues have been watering (I've got a plan for that this year!), and summer heat (I invested in shade cloth last year). This will be my third year gardening, so hopefully my plans for watering and shade will help out this year!
@ritalr15
@ritalr15 16 дней назад
I have sandy loam and in some areas black dirt. And I have a built in flower box in the front yard and in the backyard I have a couple of raised beds but majority is in ground
@CamoJan
@CamoJan Месяц назад
Zone 4b/new 5a in Minnesota. I have two raised beds that are 4w x 8L x 3d. The bottom is first lined with hardware cloth, then cardboard sheets, then small logs followed by branches, sticks, leaves, grass clippings, soil & amendments. I have had 2 back surgeries so not having to bend so low is a bonus for me. My other beds are in ground but I also have a whole lot of grow bags that I use.
@robyn3575
@robyn3575 Месяц назад
I did concrete block for my beds as my cheaper cedar bed kits didn't last beyond 5 years. I also have two metal beds which have lasted 7+ years so far with no rusting.
@MarlenesHomeandGarden
@MarlenesHomeandGarden 16 дней назад
Hi Jenna. Great tips. You are quite correct, those top soils areca joke. Have to ammend the soil. Happy Gardening.
@Javaman92
@Javaman92 Месяц назад
Every time I listen to you on one of your videos I find myself smiling and thinking what a great job you always do. SOmewhere around 16 minutes in you hit on my favorite way to make beds, along with the same reasons. (no surprise) AND that is, mounding up my soil into beds and paths It gives most of the benefits of a constructed raised bed without the cost. PLUS I can plant on the slope where the bed goes down to the path.
@nicholasdemarest4254
@nicholasdemarest4254 Месяц назад
At the moment I prefer raised beds due to the small size of my lot. But they are only 8in tall and sit on native soil. Topped with compost or just purchased garden soil which has worked very well over the last 6 years.
@ljbpresti
@ljbpresti Месяц назад
I have mostly inground beds but also raise them a little and used extra landscape brick we had to create their shape. This was very inexpensive for us. I wholeheartedly agree that everyone does not need raised beds. It might be the best option for certain gardeners but definitely not everyone. I don’t have any drip system setup and rarely water because our in ground beds don’t really need it. We used landscape fabric in our garden paths and covered them with pea gravel. It sounds nice to walk on and some weeds pop up but few and far between. Also everyone says raised beds are more ergonomic but I always find I have back pain whenever I help friends or family with raised beds because I have to bend over so much. With my beds I can squat or kneel and I’m not uncomfortable.
@addysbeeandgarden320
@addysbeeandgarden320 Месяц назад
The one mistake I've made in my garden beds was to try and fill the bottom with wood stumps, twigs, leaves ect. I did this last year with 4 beds I intended to be permanent strawberry beds and now everything has sunk down quite a bit. I will eventually have to uproot my strawberries to backfill them because everything has decomposed. I am a big fan of garden seal. I also did a gorgeous raised bed with concrete wall bricks planting a Japanese maple in a higher circle than the rest of the bed. In that particular part, for that 1 permanent plant, I lined the circle with a double layer of moisture retaining weed barrier using the bricks to hold it in place. The goal was to encourage the roots of the maple to grow downward. I loved there for 4 years after planting it and loved watching it grow and show off in the spring. I cried when I left it and desperately wanted to take it with me. I bought a new one last year on "death row" at lowes ( I call the plants I get there my inmates😂). It came back beautifully, now I've got to figure out where to put it so it can be as gorgeous as my last. I do hope the new home owners appreciate it as much as I did.
@joanotte7097
@joanotte7097 Месяц назад
Very informative! Thank you
@thepetlosscompanion6602
@thepetlosscompanion6602 21 день назад
Really helpful! Thanks!😊
@cpoco
@cpoco Месяц назад
My main growing area is technically a raised bed... it's a corner of the property that a previous owner made a concrete square (divided into two rectangles) but I don't think of it as a raised bed because I step up onto it and then treat it as planting in the ground... but I had never really thought before about the fact that it is indeed a raised bed. Great information as always!
@bobschlotterfishing2678
@bobschlotterfishing2678 Месяц назад
I could only dream of knowing what you know.. But for me in south east Mo i do raised beds. Yes i use treated lumber, but i do line the inside of the bed with a heavy duty plastic to try, And i do mean Try to keep the soil from contacting the wood. Another point you brought up, Almost everyone has access to free mulch, either grass clippings, leaves, sticks ETC. And my town has it where you can get a pickup load for $10.00 That goes a long way. What i like is beds set up for individual things, Tomatoes cucumbers, Peppers, Okra, beans, Broccoli, Cauliflower, what ever. It just seams to be easier to manage. Yes cost a few mor bucks, but no need for a tiller and as you said it does help with keeping the Deer and rabbits out.
@junewrogg6137
@junewrogg6137 Месяц назад
Great information!!! All new garden for me this year. So, I'm going with 6 raised beds and everything else in ground. My husband just used his tractor to till up a 50 x 50 plot for me. I was totally surprised at the rich soil. WE just built a house and have no lawn, WE plan to rake and sew seed soon, but the lawn area, so awful, rocky hard dirt.. :( So we thought our 10 areas would be like that. Very pleased with what I am seeing in my garden area. Bonus, after watching you winter sew in milk jugs, I did that, So FUN! everything germinated and is growing, I just opened them today, fed and watered them. You are a great source for gardening tips. Thank You.
@tbone9194
@tbone9194 Месяц назад
Thanks for the advice.
@GmamaGrowz
@GmamaGrowz Месяц назад
Thanks for sharing your comparisons and great information on wood 🤓!
@mister-action1
@mister-action1 Месяц назад
Great info. Jenna!
@JulesGardening
@JulesGardening Месяц назад
Place looks great by the way, love that aerial view.
@TheGardenFamily
@TheGardenFamily Месяц назад
Nice to see another great video Jenna, hope you and the family are having a wonderful gardening season!
@GrowfullywithJenna
@GrowfullywithJenna Месяц назад
Thanks- hope you are too!
@flyfishdr
@flyfishdr Месяц назад
I use containers for potatoes, herbs, and carrots Everything else is in-ground
@johnjude2685
@johnjude2685 Месяц назад
In your pass videos you have large sunflowers and don't disturb at least one root ball from last season and plant a tomato in it without tilting it bone meal 1/2 cup its something gardener of all ages can do and some with disabilities thanks
@viralprimenetwork
@viralprimenetwork Месяц назад
Love watering! So relaxing, Thanks for the video! 🥰😍
@bitchinrn
@bitchinrn Месяц назад
I’m a NY zone 6 gardener and I use raised beds over the native soil. I live in the mountains and our soil is so rocky. I do have a few things in an inground bed and they’re doing well because I have worked to amend the soil. I also use a lot of grow bags and towers. Can’t let these rocks beat me! 😂
@DanielleMcClain-gn1ef
@DanielleMcClain-gn1ef 18 дней назад
I’m not really sure whether to call my beds raised or not. They are not contained, they were formed by us throwing compost, manure, leaves, only mulch etc in a pile for a few years. We never tilled or broke up the heavy clay soil underneath, but there is not a barrier separating any of it. My husband calls it the “garden humps”
@TerribleTim68
@TerribleTim68 Месяц назад
The bulk of my garden is on a hillside, so technically it’s a lot of terraced beds, but at the end of the day they are, in essence, raised beds. My knees can’t take a lot of kneeling down, so I prefer raised beds. Even the flat areas I have, I have raised beds. They are all open on the bottom so the soil and microbial life can blend with the earth below. Raised beds for the win over here. 😎
@thomasw7952
@thomasw7952 Месяц назад
Year-round I grow tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers, and zucchini in buckets and home-made earth boxes around my pool. I mix my own soil from Black Kow & various potting soil mixes. Earthworm castings is my latest amendment to my soil. The results are fantastic!
@sharpland
@sharpland Месяц назад
We do a mix, like you. Small raised beds with fluffy stuff for carrots and other root crops, along with mounded, in-ground beds that get amended and aerated each season. We're using straw and wood chips in our pathways, with the plan of growing wine caps in those paths for maximum use of space.
@PhilipDonna1982
@PhilipDonna1982 Месяц назад
NE Ohio here. We have raised beds for edibles and in ground inside our fenced in property for perennial flowers. Portions of our back yard were a swamp until mid-June due to neighbors broken guttering and being somewhat downhill of the houses on our street. My husband installed French drains attached to a sump pump which has been a game changer. Still squishy but not ankle deep in the “way back” as we like to call that area. I don’t mind the watering as my husband also installed a rain barrel. I’ve only drained it a few times in the hot high Summer months. I do plant winter rye in my raised beds in the fall and this fall will add other cover crops which I will cut and drop in early May.
@GrowfullywithJenna
@GrowfullywithJenna Месяц назад
Thanks for sharing!
@user-vi4zw8ps1c
@user-vi4zw8ps1c Месяц назад
Thanks for the video! Great job!
@GrowfullywithJenna
@GrowfullywithJenna Месяц назад
Thanks!
@marilynweber7957
@marilynweber7957 Месяц назад
We love the tonka truck with the chickens lol raising that boy right!
@GrowfullywithJenna
@GrowfullywithJenna Месяц назад
😄
@threeowls369
@threeowls369 Месяц назад
I’m glad you put this video out here. For a beginner gardener is to grow what you love. Since I’ve started watching your channel, you only had a couple thousand subs. I’m proud and happy for you. Representing Zone 6a phenomenally. My garden is a hot mess yet it does produce. I tend to grow in containers and with cinder blocks. Thank you for being passionate about your gift 💝 👩‍🌾. Keep up the great work. I’ve been experimenting with self wicking and it seems to be working for me. 😊
@minivandreamin1789
@minivandreamin1789 Месяц назад
I also have a combo of inground and raised beds. I’ve been slowly adding more metal raised beds as I can afford them. For me I like the tidiness of them and I feel like I can get more in a raised bed verses in ground. I still have a long way to go before I am 100% raised bed and I may not ever get there. Gardening for me is like one big science experiment and things are always changing.
@GrowfullywithJenna
@GrowfullywithJenna Месяц назад
Gardening IS absolutely one big science experiment-- so true!
@nicolasbertin8552
@nicolasbertin8552 Месяц назад
To improve dryness and warmth of the soil, you can use black tarps though, they do this a lot in France. Of course the main goal is to kill weeds (especially perennial weeds). But a black tarp is much cheaper and of course it can be placed anywhere. Veggie farmers get free used tarps from cow farmers who use those tarps to ferment corn stalks for cattle feed. They can only use those tarps for a year or two, and then throw them out, but veggie farmers don't mind a couple of holes. The biggest con of raised beds for me is all the reasons why it's more expensive : expensive to build, expensive to water, expensive to maintain, expensive to fill in. There is also something very satisfying gardening in your native soil instead of the insane rich soil folks create in a raised bed. Your native soil and your native climate is what terroir is about, it's what makes your local veggies taste unique.
@cathypayton4804
@cathypayton4804 Месяц назад
Another great video 😊
@GrowfullywithJenna
@GrowfullywithJenna Месяц назад
Thank you 🤗
@andrewmckinley6571
@andrewmckinley6571 Месяц назад
Just getting started this year. Planning on in ground with a 6 inch raise. In western Pennsylvania the weather is not helping at the moment 😅
Далее
How to Get the Best Flavor & Yields From Your Garden!
25:39
Why to Mulch and Best Natural Mulches
21:39
Просмотров 311 тыс.
МЯСНОЙ ЦЕХ - Страшилки Minecraft
37:24
ОВР Шоу: Русская баня @TNT_television
12:06
Why I Decided To Till My Garden
9:02
Просмотров 234 тыс.
May 2024 Vegetable Garden Tour
41:17
Просмотров 26 тыс.
How to Get Rid of Moles in the Garden
14:59
Просмотров 12 тыс.
Our Raised Bed Gardening Journey: Lessons Learned
14:16
1/8 Acre Abundance: FULL TOUR + BEST TIPS for Growing
24:31
What is the Best Fertilizer for Seedlings?
26:14
Просмотров 105 тыс.
10 Common Raised Bed Garden Mistakes
21:44
Просмотров 634 тыс.
What To Do in the Garden in May: Zone 6
20:40
Просмотров 31 тыс.