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Seattle Urban Farm Company - Garden trellises and supplies

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Seattle Urban Farm Company - Garden trellises and supplies

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Episode 113: Wood-Framed Raised Beds

November 17, 2021 hilary dahl
Wood-framed raised bed garden

A wood-framed raised bed garden consisting of two 4x8'x16” raised beds, made from rough-cut cedar 4x6x2” boards

In this episode Hilary and Colin answer a listener's questions about wood-framed raised bed construction best practices. Seattle Urban Farm Company has designed and built hundreds of custom raised bed gardens in the Seattle area, so check out this episode for an inside scoop on all of the pro tips!


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  • Listen right now in your browser by clicking above.

SHOW NOTES:

In this episode, we discuss:

  • How to choose the best material and prepare your site for a long-lasting wood-framed raised bed garden.

The following garden beds are both constructed using 6” wide rough-cut cedar boards, and treated with internal wood stabilizer. The garden on the left was treated with the clear stabilizer, and the garden on the right was treated with the tinted version of the product:

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Important Take-aways:

  • Raised beds come in all shapes and sizes. In the episode we focus on wood-framed raised garden beds because they’re by far the most popular type with our clients; but technically, raised beds can be as simple as a mound of soil built up in a dedicated location, or as complex as mortared stone beds.

  • 4x8' rectangular beds are the most economical size wood-framed bed to build because 8’ boards are the least expensive cut of lumber, and they require no wood waste. We like to build our beds out of 4x8’x6’ boards.

  • How to get the most life out of your raised beds:

    • Choose high-quality lumber

    • Treat lumber with a food-safe internal wood-stabilizer

    • Take the time to prepare your site so that your beds are situated on a stable, smooth surface

    • Install cross-bracing on any bed larger than 4x4’

    • Keep your bed construction simple; often details such as mitered edges won’t wear well when exposed to the elements

  • Lining your beds. The following are situations in which lining your beds with landscape fabric, and/or hardware cloth, will go a long way in improving your growing experience and the safety of the food you’re growing:

    • Line the inside of your beds with landscape fabric if your subsoil is contaminated, or if your beds are sited on an impervious surface.

    • Line the bottoms of your beds with landscape fabric, extending the material beyond the edges of the beds or if you have large trees or shrubs* near by. If you line the insides of your beds to exclude roots, it’s possible that the roots will work their way up the sides of the beds between the landscape fabric and the wood-frame. I know this sounds extreme, but we’ve seen it!

    • Line the inside of your beds with landscape fabric, and staple hardware cloth to the bottom of the beds if you think there’s a possibility that burrowing pests like moles and voles might be around.

    *Leyland Cypress is a very common privacy hedge plant with particularly aggressive roots!

Beds that are built near large trees or shrubs (see photo on left for Leyland Cypress example from podcast), or on impervious surfaces such as patios and rooftops, should be lined with landscape fabric:

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Our books will help you build a better garden:

 
Grow More Food: A Vegetable Gardener's Guide to Getting the Biggest Harvest Possible from a Space of Any Size
By McCrate, Colin, Halm, Brad
Food Grown Right, In Your Backyard: A Beginner's Guide to Growing Crops at Home
By McCrate, Colin, Halm, Brad
 
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Like what you hear? Please share our podcast with a friend. Subscribe on iTunes, Stitcher, Spotify, or any of your favorite podcast players to have new episodes sent directly to your device. And we'd really appreciate you showing us some love by leaving a rating and review on iTunes. 

Have a topic you'd like see us dig in to? Email us at eb@seattleurbanfarmco.com


Your Hosts:

Featured
Hilary Dahl
Hilary Dahl

Hilary Dahl is a co-owner of Seattle Urban Farm Company and host of the Encyclopedia Botanica podcast. Since 2010 Hilary Dahl has been helping beginning and experienced growers create beautiful and productive gardens. She has the unique experience of working in on a wide range of projects, from small backyard garden plots to multi-acre vegetable farms. She also works in her own garden every day after work. Hilary is also the creator of our podcast, the Encyclopedia Botanica, which she started as a way to share effective and efficient garden management techniques, and as a way to spread her love of growing food and flowers!

Colin McCrate
Colin McCrate

Colin McCrate has been growing food organically for over 25 years. He worked on a variety of small farms in the Midwest before moving to the west coast in 2003 to teach garden-based environmental education. He founded the Seattle Urban Farm Company in 2007 with the goal of applying years of horticultural and agricultural expertise to help aspiring growers get projects off the ground or more accurately; in the ground.

Since starting Seattle Urban Farm Co in 2007, he has helped guide hundreds of urban farmers through the design, construction and management of their own edible landscape. Colin is the author of three books; Food Grown Right, In Your Backyard(Mountaineers Books, 2012) and Grow More Food (Storey Publishing, 2022); and is a garden writer for the Seattle Times.

In Podcast, Winter, Garden Design Tags Encyclopedia Botanica, Podcast, Niki Jabbour, season extension, garden planning, organic gardening, vegetable gardening, winter gardening, cold frames, edible gardening
← Episode 114: Garden Soil Ecosystems with Jeff LowenfelsEpisode 112: High Tunnels, Hoophouses and Greenhouses →
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seattle urban farm company
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