Gardening CareTips for the Backyard Gardener
Greenhouse Systems from Lost Creek
How can I make a raised garden box that can be moved to another part of the yard?

I have a small yard with limited sun. I want to have a vegetable garden box but be able to move the box out of the way for BBQ’s and parties.
It doesn’t need to be on wheels. Just light enough so that two people could lift it and move it over to the wall.
Is this possible? Do you have any info on this being done before?
My concern is drainage. If I make the bottom out of redwood, should I also put plastic liner inside to protect it from rotting? And how many drainage holes would it need?

If you have info on one that I can bought like this that would also be very helpful.
Thank you!

Use weed barrier in the bottom, sand on top of the barrier and then add soil. No plastic in the bottom. Space the bottom boards about a 1/4 inch apart. If you have already built the box with no space between the boards drill 1in. holes in the corners and in the middle. Most likely you will have some sagging in the middle and the middle hole will drain fine.The weed barrier will hold your soil and allow for air penetration. Put legs on the box for easy access to move. Good Luck.

admin @ 8:37 am

5 Comments for 'How can I make a raised garden box that can be moved to another part of the yard?'

  1.  
    King Arjun
    November 12, 2009 | 2:27 pm
     

    try sme rope
    References :

  2.  
    Karen L
    November 12, 2009 | 3:02 pm
     

    If it’s going to be big enough to grow vegetables in, and it’s bigger than a planter, it’s going to be too heavy to move once it has soil in it. Figure how much soil you would need to fill the size of box you have in mind, then go to a garden centre and try to lift that many bags of soil all at once. The box will have to be built like a tank to be lifted at all, especially after a growing season or two when the wood has been good and wet for a while. Maybe you better just stick to planter box size stuff if you’ll have to move it, and not too big either. Wheels could work, but they’re going to have to be large expensive wheels. Get them too small and they’ll get flat spots from too much weight and won’t function as wheels for long. I’ve had wooden planters about 2 x 1 foot that weren’t easy to drag around.
    References :

  3.  
    lloyd
    November 12, 2009 | 3:23 pm
     

    Use weed barrier in the bottom, sand on top of the barrier and then add soil. No plastic in the bottom. Space the bottom boards about a 1/4 inch apart. If you have already built the box with no space between the boards drill 1in. holes in the corners and in the middle. Most likely you will have some sagging in the middle and the middle hole will drain fine.The weed barrier will hold your soil and allow for air penetration. Put legs on the box for easy access to move. Good Luck.
    References :

  4.  
    rmbrruffian
    November 12, 2009 | 3:57 pm
     

    You don’t have to use soil to fill the box. Soilless mix will work better. It is usually a mix of peat moss, perlite and/or vermiculite, and possibly coir (shredded coconut hulls). This is much lighter than soil. If you add polymer gel crystals to the mix, it will hold water longer so that you don’t have to water constantly. See link

    http://www.watersorb.com/index.html
    References :
    Horticulture student

  5.  
    Lindsay
    November 12, 2009 | 4:46 pm
     

    Have you considered scouring yard sales and salvage yards for old wheelbarrows, painting them up, drilling for drainage and using as mobile planters?
    You would need to stand the wheel on a block to make the tray sit straight each time, but it would be deep enough to grow things in.
    References :

Leave a comment

(required)

(required)


Instruction for comments :

You can use these tags:
XHTML: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>



RSS Feed for comments | TrackBack URI

 
Theme by Theme by Robert