Compost & Garden Soil Suppliers Don't Want You To Know About This Cheap Way To Fill Your Raised Beds

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 29 ม.ค. 2025

ความคิดเห็น • 1.4K

  • @Leveraction-xr4uz
    @Leveraction-xr4uz 3 ปีที่แล้ว +827

    One thing I always caution people about that live in Cities and Towns where the grass clippings, brush and tree trimmings are all collected by their Municipality. Many places take all this "yard waste" to their local dump site and pile it up to decompose. They then allow the citizens to come get that "composted" material at a price per load in their pickup trucks or on trailers.
    The key here is what did the previous owners spray or put on their lawns to keep them pretty and green? What was sprayed or applied to their shrubbery, mulched areas to keep down weeds, etc. You want to be very careful as you may be loading up your raised beds or tilling into your garden soil actual Poison, Round-Up, etc. and who knows what else.
    Please be careful folks...

    • @Lkn4kin1
      @Lkn4kin1 3 ปีที่แล้ว +31

      Thanks for mentioning this. I was about to head to my dump for free compost tomorrow. Crud!

    • @Janotes
      @Janotes 3 ปีที่แล้ว +50

      This is true. I worked in Solid waste for many years and although municipal compost programs mean well there is no quality control. Material is essentially collected at times by the same trucks that collect household waste. Many times
      After receiving compost from the giveback programs I observed bits of glass, plastic debris and who knows
      What else.

    • @corydickey6977
      @corydickey6977 3 ปีที่แล้ว +23

      That is right here our dump gives it away for free but you risk of the pesticides

    • @nadif8437
      @nadif8437 3 ปีที่แล้ว +25

      You are so very right! I got so called mulch from my town for the community garden and I'll tell you, we had literally bags of plastic bag pieces, bottle caps, wires and any number of inorganic things in the mix. It was awful!! I dread getting anything from them this year. Luckily we were just using it as ground cover, but still wasn't happy about it.

    • @flowerpower9541
      @flowerpower9541 3 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      Yes! I got bindweed because I did that

  • @HabaneroTi
    @HabaneroTi ปีที่แล้ว +13

    I figured this out the hard way. Five years ago I built a raised bed planter out of untreated douglas fir 2x4's, and filling it with quality soil would have been cost prohibitive. I just happen to live a short walk from the local parks department wood processing facility where they turn down trees and branches into various grades of mulch. So I collected several large garbage bags full of the finer mulch and mixed it into the soil I had along with some more that I bought, which filled the planter. Problem solved, right?
    Well, sort of. This filled the planter but, as you can guess, the crops that year didn't turn out that well, which I later found out was because the wood chips leached the nitrogen and other nutrients out of the soil, even though I supplemented with time release fertilizer pellets.
    So the next year I removed as much of the soil-mulch mix as I could and separated out most of the bigger pieces of mulch, with the smaller pieces having mostly decomposed by now. I then laid down a thick layer of fresh mulch along with the old mulch that I removed from the soil, added some organic fertilizer that had all sorts of garden-friendly bacteria and fungi, watered it, then put the soil back on top, mixing in some more organic fertilizer. With the smaller pieces of old mulch having decomposed and the soil having settled a bit, this brought the soil back to the correct level. I then proceeded to sow and transplant my plants.
    And what do you know, this time the plants flourished, and the kicker was that at the end of the growing season and after wintering, much of the mulch I lined the bottom of the planter with had decomposed, so I could mix it in with the soil after adding fresh mulch. I've been doing this every year since and have had great results. This year I'm fine-tuning things further by testing the soil and amending as needed.

  • @AuntNutmeg
    @AuntNutmeg 3 ปีที่แล้ว +752

    I'm in the suburbs in a near-treeless group of homes immediately around mine. My husband and I put in a raised bed a couple years ago. We couldn't afford to fill with potting soil, but our soil here is mostly clay. I saved shreds from our paper shredder for months as we installed our bed, digging down to put in vole-discouraging mesh a foot down. Any piece of paper we didn't want I shredded. I also saved all the coffee grounds, and got some free from a local Starbucks. The first year we didn't even try to fill the bed, just add a few inches of material and top with a few bags of soil. The garden didn't do super well, but we also started months too late (early June in IN) due to the time required in building it. Last year I added more coffee grounds, more paper shreds, and more soil. Garden did quite well. I also mulched part of it with paper shreds for weed control once the plants were growing. Lots of worms are very active in that bed! Can't wait to get started this year.

    • @jonothandoeser
      @jonothandoeser 3 ปีที่แล้ว +86

      You must rake leaves in the public parks... pretending to be a conscientious city employee.

    • @AuntNutmeg
      @AuntNutmeg 3 ปีที่แล้ว +63

      @@jonothandoeser no thanks. I grow food in that raised bed, and I have no interest in leaves that have been sprayed with who knows what.

    • @jonothandoeser
      @jonothandoeser 3 ปีที่แล้ว +24

      @@AuntNutmeg They spray your park trees?!! Is there an insect problem??

    • @marlenecardinahl9346
      @marlenecardinahl9346 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Correct

    • @Tnj8228
      @Tnj8228 3 ปีที่แล้ว +43

      @@AuntNutmeg is paper clean? Honest question

  • @joannaennis7866
    @joannaennis7866 2 ปีที่แล้ว +27

    Good stuff. I have a small urban garden in London, UK, so don't have access to the vegetation you used. However, I soon discovered that it was too expensive buying bags of compost or top soil so bought a compost bin. We don't eat a lot of vegetables, however, the worms love my old teabags, egg shells, toilet rolls, newspapers, banana skins, odd dead bird, porous circulars, and a few dead leaves and all old plants that are not weeds. It never ceases to amaze me when after about 8 months two thirds of the bin is rich black lush soil full of happy worms! God is so clever!!

    • @jessstone7486
      @jessstone7486 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Love this!!!

  • @robinguertin574
    @robinguertin574 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    If you're wondering where to get free cardboard boxes I have a suggestion. I work at a large chain drug store and we get our stock trucked in 2 to 3 times a week. We just throw out all of those cardboard boxes.
    Ask any stores around you when they are expecting their shipments and if you can take their boxes.
    It's a win for you and the landfill.

  • @mvblitzyo
    @mvblitzyo 3 ปีที่แล้ว +149

    20 years ago as a young Tree worker, whom did not know anything compared to now. I explained this method to a manager whom was a ISA certified arborist for at least 22 at that time. He took a week of research to answer me that my years of trial and error this method is best. Thanks for proving my thoughts and experience are valid. Joe the tree guy.

  • @patriciatardell1262
    @patriciatardell1262 3 ปีที่แล้ว +46

    Thank you for information. I have to start raised bed and my entire garden over for 2022. This will make it more affordable.

  • @alancarlyon340
    @alancarlyon340 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    I am one of those new gardeners since my wife had a stroke! I am fortunate to have woods near by and I also have a huge oak tree in my garden that sheds its leaves each oct/nov time here in Scotland. I built a cloche and then went into the wood with my barrow and dug up the rotten leaf mould that has been lying dormant for years, free compost/leaf mould. I also put any weeds I remove from my garden and let them rot in bucket of rain water, it can smell a bit, but it is good fertiliser feed when I mix it ten parts water! I have created my own leaf mould over 3 years and I have never bought compost, I did once for my family hanging baskets, but found it was burnt and had so many twigs etc added. If one digs deep enough in the woods/forest you can retrieve fine leaf mould which has been under there for centuries! Riddle it and create great compost! My wife is now trying to do a bit in HER garden which is now a joint effort! Great blog you have posted in letting folk know in how to make use of the earths material that surrounds us in life and that it can be used - freely!

  • @PrincessMaryMargaret
    @PrincessMaryMargaret 2 ปีที่แล้ว +24

    WOW! I said a prayer today for money to come so I could buy soil to start my food garden. You are a big answer to my prayer.

    • @technoman9000
      @technoman9000 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I say a prayer to the Algorithm every day

  • @rebeccadubose2434
    @rebeccadubose2434 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I fill a 5 gallon bucket with wood chips and water and let those soak for several days. Then add it to the bottom of large pots. Garden waste and kitchen scraps are next. Finish with soil snd potting mix. As the soil dries it pulls water from the wood chips. Works for me.

  • @eurekaelephant2714
    @eurekaelephant2714 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I recently was given half a steel pod, with the plastic removed inside. After watching one of your videos, i lined it with wire netting, then chinese cabbage palm hessian, (from my palm), and thick cardboard. I then filled the pod with leaves, straw, rotting branches and, left over cassava greens and stems from a cassava plant i had just chopped back. The top was 10 inches of soil and compost...the bottom of the pod i left exposed to the ground to let in worms etc. Well the vegies i planted are so healthy and happy! The bok choi is the biggest, crispy-est ive ever planted. The sunflowers are powering on and im looking forward to them flowering. Bonus: the cassava shot up through the soil (unexpectedly), so now i'll even get a summer cassava crop, as the winter vegies die down! Really happy with this technique. Mother nature knows best hey! And youre right, sooo much cheaper too. Thankyou, and cheers!

  • @stevecooper8121
    @stevecooper8121 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I started a compost pile in my small garden using grass clippings mulch leaves coffee grounds egg shells coffee filters. I move the pile every year and spread the compost pile around ,where I have had the pile everything in that area grows great.I only use blood meal and bone meal and wood ash for fertilizer .
    I don't spray any chemicals and the vegetables are great
    The Japanese Beetles are the biggest problem but I use a trap down wind from the garden and it keeps the damage to a minimum.

  • @TheDeadbone1961
    @TheDeadbone1961 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    You had me at "leaves." I have LOADS of them on my property. Thank you for easing my mind - I always worried I was being cheap - on using them. Subscribed :)

  • @contraryMV
    @contraryMV 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I have this stuff in abundance in my wild and crazy backyard. No excuses now.

  • @the1greko
    @the1greko 3 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    You work is being followed here in Portugal (Europe)
    Please keep on doing that excellent work
    Peace, Love, Unity and Respect

  • @603storm
    @603storm 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    This vid changed my whole outlook on raised beds to include grow bags. Thanks.

  • @MsLizHicks
    @MsLizHicks 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I learn something...and dude has a comforting voice, too 😁

  • @pinsandneedles4020
    @pinsandneedles4020 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    One year we saved all the leaves from my trees as they fell in the Fall. I mulched every area of my garden and let them stay all winter. they were probably 3 feet high and I have a pretty large garden. After the snow and other dry times through winter they broke down and in spring I tilled the area and let me tell you...That was the best garden I ever had come spring. Everything grew like crazy. Leaves are the best for breaking down my sandy soil here in Connecticut. Don't ever get rid of your leaves. Also mow them into the lawn and you'll have the greenest grass in the neighborhood. I love your idea of doing things cheap or for free. We put a lot of money when we started 18 years ago. Now we get free skids and turn them into raised beds. We even got soap barrels from the car wash for free to use as planters. We cut them in half and make 2 planters out of them. It beats spending 30 bucks on big pots. Those I don't use for food though. I worry about the plastic leaching poison but they are great for a lot of sprawling flowers. There are so many things you can get for free. We get horse manure for free. Wood chips from a guy who cuts trees. I have 1 or 2 deliveries a year and a 20.00 tip for the driver. I love the Ikea bag idea but I worry about the "food grade" issue. Perhaps use them but line it with a cotton or some type of organic material. I do a lot of sewing and can make stuff but the burlap bags might be a good option for a liner. Anyway, love that I found your videos. I'm 70 and still learning. Thanks for all your shared ideas.

  • @lindabeebe3599
    @lindabeebe3599 3 ปีที่แล้ว +155

    Calm voice, informative, concise. What's not to like?😃. I hit the like and subscribe.

  • @asiasoto4917
    @asiasoto4917 2 ปีที่แล้ว +37

    I did this with our raised veggies beds a few years ago. My husband thought I was crazy but our garden is gorgeous and it's great to see the material breaking up when digging around in the beds.

    • @arynasmail
      @arynasmail ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I am doing it too, driving around picking bags of organics from our neighbors, my husband also thinks that I am crazy, he comments and complains (as if I actually spent money by doing so or did something wrong...). Just ridiculous.

  • @europanzz
    @europanzz 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Ive got heaps of rotting logs and branches down the bottom of my property.. what a great idea.. thanks.

  • @natureboy6410
    @natureboy6410 3 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Exactly. Work with what you're given and work with mother nature, not against her. 🤗👍

  • @nshue23
    @nshue23 3 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    I built mine last spring 18" deep. I started the fall before collecting bags of leafs set out to the trash and got close too 100 of them. Then in the spring I found someone on Craigslist giving away free organic hay that got rained on. It got about 30 bales. I filled them up as much as possible with this and my grass clippings and topped off with compost.

  • @sacrebleu1371
    @sacrebleu1371 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Been using hugelkultur techniques within my raised beds. Sounds very close to this. ❤

  • @carolferguson5879
    @carolferguson5879 3 ปีที่แล้ว +64

    Thank you, thank you, thank you! I've covered my front lawn with about a million cardboard boxes topped with 5 inches of wood chips to kill the grass, and I've been waiting patiently for the last threat of frost to pass (I'm in Florida). But after watching this, I'm going to start building my beds now. I've collected a number of huge black plastic planters (used for trees), and I'm going to start filling them up with all the old wood my chipper can't handle, along with the oak leaves I'm mulching. Might as well let it all start marinating now!

    • @nadif8437
      @nadif8437 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Very nice. I started the same project in my community garden to get rid of the grass. Not a fun one but hopefully it works because only a couple of us kept the grass up and it's a task! Hope your project came out nicely!

    • @dslim3153
      @dslim3153 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Wonderful idea. I may join you.

  • @chrisbaxter3597
    @chrisbaxter3597 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Brown and green in layers - this is well established

  • @mrmacgregorshomestead233
    @mrmacgregorshomestead233 3 ปีที่แล้ว +260

    Exactly what I do. :) Hugelkulture style. It's the best! I made 3 mounds as well as used this method in my own raised beds. I had 8 trees downed and used many of the larger limbs in the bottoms of everything. I then used the mid sized limbs to build the boxes of the raised beds in a log cabin style manner. I used a pair of wooden stakes (literally all I had to purchase for this project) for each corner to support the corners. I then used cardboard to line the bottom and up the sides to retain everything. I started filling in with the logs and largest limbs, added leaves, sawdust and straw to fill in as much space/gaps as possible, then added sticks and limbs (largest to smallest) then more sawdust and then leaves again. I topped it off with my own composted soil and wood chips atop that after planting what I needed. Best gardens I've ever had! Every yr I add a little composted soil to amend it and to fill in what had sunk a little. It's perfect! I built the Hugelmounds (as I call them) the same way. They are 3-4' wide by 24-25' long and waist high. Lots of room to plant. Not just on the top, but all around the sides as well. I just love them! As everything decomposes, I find I barely need to water them. Win. Win.
    Win.

    • @amyblueskyirl16
      @amyblueskyirl16 3 ปีที่แล้ว +21

      Yes! This is what I’m doing to convert areas of pasture into garden and orchard

    • @thelostcatfigfarm6198
      @thelostcatfigfarm6198 3 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      We did a round shaped hugelkulture garden a few years ago with some success. Last year got the best strawberries growing there. Unfortunately the wild grassy weeds have grown into the mound and is choking out the berries.

    • @juliabrown5948
      @juliabrown5948 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@dogslobbergardens6606 I have a weedy pasture that I'm hoping to garden in for the first time this year. Would you just add the cardboard, and weigh it down, or add other things with it? Then take off or add soil and plant over it?

    • @juliabrown5948
      @juliabrown5948 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@dogslobbergardens6606 thank you!!

    • @me-hp7vh
      @me-hp7vh 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I've tried it in my current apartment where I only can have containers... I've thrown pine cones into the mix because they are everywhere on the property, I didn't hear you mention it are they ok to use? I do put sticks in my containers it does seem to help with water retention

  • @Growmap
    @Growmap 3 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    If you have a catcher for your mower, look for places you can mow. I am fortunate to have many types of clover, grass, and green weeds here. So after I put some branches and leaves and horse manure in the bottom, I alternate layers of 1 catcher full of clover/grass/weeds and 1 layer of old hay I've used as bedding in the duck's overnight house.
    Last year a volunteer pumpkin came up in a bed that had no potting mix or soil at all in it. It produced two huge pumpkins without ever having any soil at all! So don't be afraid to use this method. It really does work. And those materials retain water and then release it as needed, making your plants less susceptible to drying out.

  • @katanatac
    @katanatac 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I would suggest the first thing to put in a raised bed is hardware cloth or mesh wire and a layer of stone to keep the moles out then add the wood chips and other things.

  • @farmingfirst2164
    @farmingfirst2164 2 ปีที่แล้ว +28

    I started doing raised beds in 2016 using. rice brand , shrubs, coffee shells , rice straws and some branches of trees before adding top soil .This has worked well for me in setting up my vegetable garden to grow pepper and garden eggs on my farm is my village in Segbwema , Sierra Leone

  • @Dee-rg9yb
    @Dee-rg9yb 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Newbie here! Thank you!

  • @calmheart1782
    @calmheart1782 2 ปีที่แล้ว +43

    I really appreciate the video. I have several pots, buckets, reclaimed nursery containers, etc. that I grow in. I also ‘grow’ soil, by putting kitchen scraps, etc., in some of the containers. I sometimes put a few scraps directly into some pots that already have my plants in them. Another commenter said they grow potatoes in pots. I’m looking forward to trying that this year. I also plant the bottom part of store bought onions and celery. They grow like crazy! And this year, I’m going to designate one or two containers to grow dandelion greens in! Happy gardening everyone!

    • @carolgreenhill5684
      @carolgreenhill5684 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I gave tried many times to grow onions this way and have had no luck. What's the secret?

  • @redfaux74
    @redfaux74 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This is genius..... ❤ I have nothing but clay and rocks here. I'll try raised with this method.

  • @illanaisme
    @illanaisme 3 ปีที่แล้ว +41

    Great video!
    I built a new concrete block bed last year with a fill area of 7x4.5'. So went around the yard and filled it with "clean up debris", branches, twigs, leaves (composed) and dirt from and very old leaf pile. Got the yard cleaned up and a new bed filled free (the asparagus and strawberries love their new home.)

  • @JoeandAngie
    @JoeandAngie 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Used some hay bales to grow potatoes this year. Zone 7a.
    Now the remaining hay is compost-like...I always add mycelelial spores to all my plants and beds. Only need add spores once or twice as the mycelia spread like crazy throughout. I added spores 2-3 yrs ago and its everywhere .
    Helps everything out.
    I also use fish emulsion. In plantings and directly on my compost pile. Cant beat it, although wifey could beat me because she hates the smell!

  • @jimathey6153
    @jimathey6153 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    OLD LEATHER SMITH here. Yes I agree with everything U said. I have 2 things 2 add. I use coffee grounds and schreaded paper. Since I only grow Hot Peppers and Lavender it works great. Thanks. GOD'S BLESSINGS ✝️⚾🙃

  • @susanlee8609
    @susanlee8609 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Love the content, presentation and your voice!

  • @carolynkosin6256
    @carolynkosin6256 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Great Gardening video Dan
    Especially helpful, my husband always rakes the leaves around our trees, and throws them away before I can stop join,, . Then I have to dig them out if the trash can to put in my gardens, he just think things look a mess with all that, but I explain to him, it’s organic fertilizer with powerful nutrients for the plants, and also keeps my weeds choked out, I’m getting old and weeding is not the thing I want to be doing at my age. So thank you 🙏🏻 very much I’m going to play this video again just fir him 💗💓💞💕💖💗💓💞💕❤️❤️💜

  • @ellabradshaw6310
    @ellabradshaw6310 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    That's exactly how I started my raised beds and as Dan said, they have continued to perform and are completely organic.

  • @speaklifegardenhomesteadpe8783
    @speaklifegardenhomesteadpe8783 3 ปีที่แล้ว +38

    I also used cardboard which works amazing and turns into the earth into nothing in one season, over winter with leaves covering it is a great way to prep bed areas even on virgin ground or clay soil. You can even double up the cardboard which you can get free at any store usually. I use cardboard to fill up sloppy wet areas I dig up and pile in the cardboard. Works great! Just repeat as needed. Even designate an area you throw scraps top with cardboard and yard waste so it's not an eye sore and repeat. You'll build your own soil.
    Keep growing and bear one another's burdens joyfully, we all need you!!! ❄️💥❣️💪😃👍❣️💥✝️🙌🏻🙏😔🕯️📖🛐🦁🕊️🦅

  • @happytraveller2122
    @happytraveller2122 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I throw in grass clippings, leaf litter, kitchen scraps, paper. Chip bark, small twigs and sticks. Top with soil mix. Works for me

  • @paolomaggi8188
    @paolomaggi8188 3 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    No doubt that your method is the best!...and the cheapest! Thank you..I will put it into practice

  • @marlenemcmillan8891
    @marlenemcmillan8891 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I live in a small town in Ontario Canada near lots of woods...going collecting soon as spring is a couple weeks away..

  • @vrobinson9283
    @vrobinson9283 3 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    WOW! I can’t wait to get started thank you so much.

  • @1sweetlittleprincess
    @1sweetlittleprincess 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    You have summarised the bane of my life in 5 seconds

  • @nikkitobin8356
    @nikkitobin8356 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I wanna thank you for putting that 🔥 back inside me about gardening
    🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩🤩

  • @brandycrosby6008
    @brandycrosby6008 3 ปีที่แล้ว +22

    Thank you for this video! We moved out to 5 acres where the soil is dense and sandy but there are so many trees around leaving branches and leaves everywhere! I was thinking I'd have to go out and buy soil to start a raised bed but now I see that I have pretty much everything I need! Can't wait to get started.

  • @Beherenow-p5e
    @Beherenow-p5e 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Thanks for sharing this great and simple method. Have used it for many years. Always works. Nothing is ever thrown away in my tiny foodforest. Recycle everything organic. Got a huge variety of plants growing happily together in peace and harmony and tons of worms. Nature teaches us everything, if we are just willing to slow down enough and listen. Happy gardening to everyone and lots of joy.🐝🐜🦋🕷🐸🦎🐸🐞

  • @direstraights
    @direstraights 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I've been using my Open Compost Pile to fill... Yep!!!🤗😇

  • @janenewley6539
    @janenewley6539 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I built several raised beds last year using this hugelkultur technique….the lowest levels were large old rotten logs not good enough to use on the stove….and then filled with materials in descending order of size…it worked well and I had good crops…but do remember that as the materials break down the levels sink down so you do need to top up the bed levels in future years.😀😀😀 Jinxy

  • @Buddha3.
    @Buddha3. 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I’m a follower!
    Dan is a teacher with a step by step,process,that is EASY to see, and a delivery that is EASY to understand,in your ‘minds eye’

  • @sandraandersen9837
    @sandraandersen9837 3 ปีที่แล้ว +45

    Thanks so much Dan. I'm sitting here in England working out my various ways to grow things without spending too much money. I really appreciate your tips especially on cardboard etc. Much love

    • @deborahcecil200
      @deborahcecil200 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      plez do not use card board around food as it has glues and chemicals to hold it together!!!!!

  • @happyran2097
    @happyran2097 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Thank for the tip in using minimum soil for maximum gain

  • @irenebussey5122
    @irenebussey5122 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I bought a new house with a blank slate for a backyard. You just saved me thousands.

  • @julietyler2717
    @julietyler2717 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    I keep my broken branches and leaves … and just made my first raised beds with your suggestions. Thank you ! Looking forward to seeing how it grows.

  • @YuriBaskov-d2z
    @YuriBaskov-d2z ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I'm in northwest Florida I have no dirt at all just white sand . I have raised beds I filled with old produce I got from the grocery store dumpsters grass clippings and chicken poop. The top soil is from a friend in Alabama I started with 1 yard . My soil is now black as tar. I am making 10 yards of soil every year now . Last year I had 6 jalapeno plants that were just over 9 feet high they produced about 900 peppers total.

  • @godsgreenacreshomestead708
    @godsgreenacreshomestead708 3 ปีที่แล้ว +96

    Thank you for the reassurance on my plan! I have 5 acres of woods on my new off grid property, and I need tall raised beds when I can start gardening there. (I'm 64) Tons of leaves, tons of downed rotten limbs and trees and cost prohibitive to fill the larger boxes I want with soil, and my land is super rocky. I've even thought of putting some rocks in the bottom to take up space! Nice to see this process visually, so thank you! Might also make the wire wrapped ones you did, or make them with straw bales to start out. Blessings, Texas Deb 😁

    • @cro2510
      @cro2510 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Hey, from TX, too. We found a few shallow places which puddle. Using wall bricks, those ones with the edge. Brother and I built up 3 - 4.75 ft. edging. Then put clay bottles, urga(?) near the sides with the tops an inch over ground. He thought the wood chips would kill from nitrogen loss, so we used garden plants, food wastes and hay then two bags laid on top then opened for soil, when finally put a tree and small blooming vegetables around the edges.
      Its a shady place to relax and she'll corn or peas, and process other veggies and fruits. Blessings I hope this gives others encouragement.

    • @MakeItTakeItOutdoors
      @MakeItTakeItOutdoors 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I used cinder blocks and they worked great. This year I am expanding so I just need to add some to the end. Also planted a few things in the holes in the blocks.

    • @carolgreenhill5684
      @carolgreenhill5684 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      What area did you find a good off grid property in Texas? I'm in Texas and have been searching for years

    • @godsgreenacreshomestead708
      @godsgreenacreshomestead708 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@carolgreenhill5684 I looked in Missouri. I love Texas, which has been home my whole life. Now I'm on a fixed income, wanted an off grid property without many restrictions, had 4 seasons, not 2, and was affordable. Missouri is freedom friendly and beautiful! I am now going to be on a mountain. Texas Deb ❤️

    • @michaelmosley254
      @michaelmosley254 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Good video what about banana tree leaves are they good I have lots of them

  • @beebob1279
    @beebob1279 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Visual learning as you demonstrated is the best way to get others to understand how to do something

  • @maggiebogdan6249
    @maggiebogdan6249 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    You reminded me of when the boys were younger and I would see them out the window in the compost “picking worms” ! They had access to 3 good fishing holes so at least I would know what their plans were for the day. We have access to most of these materials but my husband got fencing and even gates off Craig’s list for free so I
    Highly recommend checking regularly.

  • @arvellataratuta2150
    @arvellataratuta2150 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    My husband built ten new raised beds for me last fall. We have old wood, lots of leaves, dirt from the previous raised beds and a 5 gallon bucket of bokashi food scrap compost in most of them. I have three more 5 gallon buckets of food scrap compost ready to go out when everything thaws here in northern Michigan. We bought no soil at all this time around. Hoping for good results in this years garden.

  • @brotherbruns2989
    @brotherbruns2989 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I’ve been doing this since I bought my house, in a desert, 7 years ago. Quick hack: talk to landscaping companies that chip trees - many times they have to haul the chip to the dump and gives them an option to save some money - it’s a win for you and a win for them!

  • @svan794
    @svan794 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    In the last 3 years, I save $$$ from buying soil bags by doing the same methods.. and no bugs interfering my greens...Thanks👏👍💞💖💞🙏

  • @margareth1504
    @margareth1504 3 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    I do this sort of thing too. Its wonderful. Once I concerned myself about all the volume of garden clippings and stalks and fronds and the fallen tree branches twigs and many leaves. It seemed I would end up with mountains of it. Since then now I know that those overgrown garden plants came from the soil that really desperately needed replenishing again and again year after year to grow more healthy plants So now I see my garden overgrowth and fallen debri as potentially future new rich garden soil about to happen with some gathering, patience and care. It feels good.

  • @bethstinebaugh6817
    @bethstinebaugh6817 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I use this method in all my contaner plants. It works great, my mother-in-law brags about my gardening skills after planting her tomatoes last year lol. She thought I was nuts but the plant got twice as big and produced twice as much as usual. 😁

  • @stanlee1857
    @stanlee1857 3 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Ive been watching your videos for years now and As always great info Dan. Appreciate you.

  • @yarnybart5911
    @yarnybart5911 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    My brother works for a fairy in Devon, England. He got hold of 6 pallet collars for free, from some sort of heavy equiomrnt they had delivered. They were to be thrown away so he gave them to me. Ive treated the wood with tung oil to preserve it with a food safe preservative. But to put yhem out i to my vegetable patch will mean an awful lot of soil to fill them.
    I make my own compost, a mixture of the usual ingredients plus a lot of oak sawdust i get from a local saw mill, mixed with an abundance of grass clippings i take from a 2 acre field. I am also in the process of converting that to a meadow.
    Even so, i would use all my compost if i filled 6 raised beds with that, in fact i dont think i would have enough. I hate buying scompost in bags because of the plastic it is wrapped in.
    Watching this video has inspired me. I took a huge rotten tree trunk down last year, and have piles of huge slabs of slowly crumbling bark available. I think i will break this up into wmaller parts to fill the base of each raised bed, along with any leaves i can get from neighbours along with some more grass clippings, before i top off with own compost.
    Can't wait to get to it! Filling the beds and also using up waste that i might otherwise have burnt.
    Liked and subscribed!

  • @crochetgottaloveit
    @crochetgottaloveit 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    I built another 4' x 8' 18" high raised bed last year and I filled it with large dead limbs from our wild cherry tree. Didn't have the heart to let that wood go to waste and someone told me about the hugulture (spelling?), of filling a garden.
    We always have leaves and I like to dog holes and bury my kitchen scraps, eggshells, coffee grinds and filters directly in the garden.I have sweet potatoes growing now (planted late-last Oct), and they seem to be doing okay in the cold weather.
    Thanks much for making this video and for the excellent explanation. 😊😊😊

  • @mirasolpimentel2209
    @mirasolpimentel2209 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thank you for sharing your idea.

  • @MyScrapChick
    @MyScrapChick 2 ปีที่แล้ว +30

    Such great info. Now I'm looking all around at the clippings, leaves, branches, etc I typically rake up and throw out. It's been years since I've gardened. The info on depths of layers is a game changer for me. Thank you! Most helpful info I've found.

    • @lisas5913
      @lisas5913 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Same, normally I would have thrown cuttings in my green waste bin, now I cut it up into smaller pieces and throw it in a raised bed or compost heap

    • @ronniedianefowler7648
      @ronniedianefowler7648 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      How can I keep ants from coming into my containers from the bottom?

    • @carolgreenhill5684
      @carolgreenhill5684 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@ronniedianefowler7648 good question

    • @cookiemama4
      @cookiemama4 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Same here! I have a huge mulberry tree out front, and get rid of all of it every year, including leaves! Never again! That's going to be my prize ingredient! 🤗

  • @sv160
    @sv160 ปีที่แล้ว

    Love your video thank you.
    I have a banana corner and every spring to many new ones, I laying them around my trees and bushes as fertilizer, now you 9:07 giving me ideas. I can use the banana steam for my raised beds

  • @tworebelsoffgrid
    @tworebelsoffgrid 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    We love using wood chips…we did this for almost 10 years at our house in CO and had super dark soil and will be doing it again at our homestead property in Arizona! We also had used logs and branches and leaves (Hugelkulture technique) and that’s great too! Great advice on using what you have….We love your channel!

    • @mesterak
      @mesterak ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I’m also in Arizona and have had a hard time growing much because of the heat. I’d love to hear your plan (or successes) to build and grow raised beds.

    • @tworebelsoffgrid
      @tworebelsoffgrid ปีที่แล้ว

      @@mesterak we are in southeast Arizona in the foothills, so we don’t get as hot as the Phoenix and Tucson areas do, although it does get hot here, just typically not over 100° we plan on building a greenhouse that will be attached to our home on the south east side and will have raised beds inside of it. We also have very rocky soil, so raise beds will be necessary because in some areas we can’t dig down to awfully deep because of those rocks we would highly recommend lots of mulch on whatever you plant whether it’s in the ground or in a raised bed. They say rocks are the best mulch for desert applications. We’ve been mulching with whatever we have around our property like sticks, grass, and rocks. There are also a couple of watering techniques that we’re going to try, one will be the 3 to 4 inch PVC pipe that is placed in to the ground very deep towards the roots Were you can water the roots more directly. We will also try the burying the clay pot method for watering, but I cannot recall the name of that method!

  • @cedarrockcabin3633
    @cedarrockcabin3633 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I live in the mountains of western NC on a heavily wooded lot. I have only been gardening for 3 yrs. But, where my garden is, although sloped, had horses in it before we bought it. I have been tempted to gather dirt and compost from our property, but didn't know if I'd be introducing pests and funk. I'm going to try this with my new bed! I mean, we have an abundance of natural organic compost on our property & the trees & other vegetation seem very happy. Nothing ventured nothing gained, right!?

  • @rastus666
    @rastus666 3 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    I amended the soil in my terraced garden every year with manure/compost, and used at least 4 inches of wood chips as mulch, which reduced over a southern summer to an inch or so. Every spring I turned my soil to a depth of 10-12 inches with a shovel. Also composted kitchen scraps, and my compost pile was also my worm farm.

  • @heels-villeshoerepairs8613
    @heels-villeshoerepairs8613 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Great tip! I have bagged up a heap of leaves and twigs and wood waiting to find a place to dump it, now i have a use for it!!!😀😃😄

  • @akadia71
    @akadia71 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    This is so helpful. I have raised beds that are sunken in and a lot of the nutrients are depleted from very heavy growers, like potatoes. I was stressing out about the cost of buying more soil! Thank you!

  • @RCSTILE
    @RCSTILE 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Take a trip to your local landfill. They all sell garden soil of all type, dirt cheap. You can fill a pickup truck with an 8' box 4 times for $200. That's about $1500 when buying it by the bag at the Depot.

  • @maggio556
    @maggio556 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Dude, you gave me so many ideas for getting rid of the grass in my backyard with raised beds. and the different methods. Thanks!

  • @TotallyOther
    @TotallyOther 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    i just pulled my compost bin (full of branches) back from the curb and will chop them up to bolster a raised bed i will complete this weekend. thank you.

  • @randomness8819
    @randomness8819 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    New sub. Excited to be part of your community. Great info and a lovely demeanor of narration. Thank you!

  • @wdking8833
    @wdking8833 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Good advice. My three foot high raised bed, after five years, is now some 20" deep of lovely garden soil from an initial depth of 6-12" (I put the 6s on one side and the 12s on the other). I do little gardening in the fall, so by frost, my garden is pretty much done. Then I pull all the spent plants, level the soil and start adding goodies. For compostable waste, I dig a hole, drop the waste in and cover it with soil. A neighbor who does lawn work brings the leaves from people's yards to us and they go in. The spent plants go in. When we do yard cleanup, everything that will decompose goes in. No rhyme or reason. As I get things, I just toss them in. In the spring, I usually buy one bag of soil. As I plant, I simply move anything on top of the soil away with a trowel, dig a hole, put in some garden soil, plant the plant and fill in with the garden soil, then I can spread the top stuff that I moved back around the plant to "mulch" it. As time goes on my yields get better and better, since I started with red clay under the first layer.

  • @TheTamrock2007
    @TheTamrock2007 3 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    I am so grateful for your videos on this subject. Really excited to have started some seeds and this idea is what I need to have a small garden going this year. Blessings to you

  • @MachiFurni
    @MachiFurni ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Perfect. You have the best ever advice on TH-cam and it works 100%.
    Thank you for your honestly advising 😊❤❤

  • @kdaniel8721
    @kdaniel8721 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    My raised bins are 3ft high.
    I made false mesh bottoms, approx 18" down.
    My base layer is a mixture of dry leaves and shredded newspaper, then soil.
    Works very well.

  • @honestlee4532
    @honestlee4532 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Just recently scored a bunch of free wood by noticing a sign on my bike ride. Noticed that they were taking down raised beds. Loaded up the wood then knocked on the door and asked about the soil and they didn't want it so I scored a bunch of free soil just by asking about it. Made a couple of nice long boxes to run along the driveway. After putting in some soil, I've been adding old food scraps and then I dug up some worms to start eating and start fertilizing my soil.
    Didn't have good soil, or worms, when I first moved in but covered the yard with wood chips. HUGE difference in my soil just by keeping it covered in wood chips. Scored a bunch of free wood chips on another bike ride by noticing they chopped down a bunch of trees and left piles of wood chips everywhere. Just went back and filled up my bag over and over again. Took about a year to transform my soil.

  • @robynevans1287
    @robynevans1287 3 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    THANK YOU for sharing what you've learned & what's working for you!🤗💖 I really appreciate it, for MANY reasons... but in this moment it's because you've just given me CONFIRMATION🌟 that what I felt would be beneficial to do ( & so I did ) IS ACTUALLY BENEFICIAL & WORKS! ...I'm not exactly sure if it was my Granddad Smith💖 coming through or simply an Inner Knowing, but I followed it... & it is a VERY COOL feeling getting to receive confirmation via your video!💖💖💖
    (Add to the mix that although I feel VERY Connected with Nature, I've grown up in the city & haven't had any training or real experience with farming , so it just makes the feeling even BETTER!)😊💖
    *THANK YOU* for being YOU & doing what you do!
    Wishing you CONTINUING BOUNTIFUL HARVESTS & HAPPINESS!💖💖💖

  • @HazelDavidson-jf8ux
    @HazelDavidson-jf8ux 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I love this idea presented and I have seen this before. This concept has been used for years in Europe. Regardless it works so well for now and making rich soil for later. ❤❤❤

  • @altajohnson6513
    @altajohnson6513 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I have been doing pretty much everything you have mentioned for years! A lot of fun and sweat. Love my raised beds and the produce thereof. Thank you for your encouragement, always nice to find a fellow traveler.

  • @altcoinbitcoincryptoabcsto7872
    @altcoinbitcoincryptoabcsto7872 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks for the insight and the smart use of what God has given us to use in caring for his creation. I have all of those materials around my yard ready to be transferred into useable soil.

  • @alisonhilaryco1898
    @alisonhilaryco1898 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Great video💛 I use large old nursery pots for my garden area. We have a huge area up the back for grass clippings, leaves and logs. It gives a vital habitat for birds too. It’s their mansion as I like to call it. It also is pure gold as an endless supply of rich organic soil.

  • @bonnieriecke5199
    @bonnieriecke5199 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    Have a bed that has been on direct dirt letting weeds die out with cardboard and I saw this which is perfect for what I have been collecting. Thanks

  • @siameseire
    @siameseire 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    What a great help, dan. Thankyou! I was doing some of this but didn't know I could do it to that extent. I'm excited. All the best to you.

  • @wambutu7679
    @wambutu7679 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thank you for the knowledge.

  • @ceepark114
    @ceepark114 3 ปีที่แล้ว +56

    We built raised beds a few years ago and fill them like you suggested with limbs, bark etc. in the bottom and now the soil is quite a bit lower than when we started so this year we will beef them up with more limbs, chips etc. and then put back the soil to raise the level back up. Thanks for great videos.

    • @karoberts2198
      @karoberts2198 3 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Try reading about hugelkultur. It is basically the same,except you don't tear it down annually. You pile it high enough to feed your plantings more than one year.

  • @deniseschweigl1283
    @deniseschweigl1283 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Love, love, love this video- thank you!

  • @thescarlettbandit5542
    @thescarlettbandit5542 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Thank you for your tips here. I put them to good use today while buzzing around the garden preparing for this year. Luckily, I had last autumns various tree branches in a pile... to think I was annoyed at myself for not burning it! Ha!
    Job done 🙌😄🕊

  • @shibui99
    @shibui99 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Will 3 yr. old bark chips work?

  • @judithstorck5195
    @judithstorck5195 3 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Thank you - this helped a lot. So tired of having to purchase soil and out here in SW Arizona we HAVE TO purchase wood chips. We did have a source to go and load our pick-up with seasoned chips BUT being in our 70s it is difficult. We do have some stumps from 2 of those loads which I WILL USE. We will be getting a load of straw bales soon so we have to use that. Not many Autumn leaves in the Desert. We do have 2 compost piles from all our kitchen scraps - one is ready and the other one just started a day ago. Again, thank you for the suggestions. Judi

  • @ms.rickie
    @ms.rickie ปีที่แล้ว

    I filled mine at the bottom up to 50% with pool tubes. Worked awesome and the sponge-like tubes held moisture😊

  • @droolbunnyxo502
    @droolbunnyxo502 2 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    Thanks for this great tip. After all costs were considered, last year's estimated tomatoes cost me $20 per pound to grow, using MGro garden soil + $4-$5 started plants. This year I'm taking a completely different route, start to finish. More work but I don't mind. Gardening is mind-calming. (A touch of sarcasm re costs but not really. 😉)

    • @kgrant3184
      @kgrant3184 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Hi Drool Bunny, In case you are planning to grow your own tomato starts from your own seeds next year, I found something out that may help you. Apparently, the tomato fruit part contains seed-growth inhibitors, and needs to be completely elminated to make germination possible.
      I had read that the tomatoes need to moulder over the winter, (and had read/ heard nothing else), so that is the route I took, to try & capitalize on my tomatoes' surviving of very challenging weather last year - very cold & rain, then unusual -high temps & drought.
      After a super-smelly number of months, I watched a UK gardener show a MUCH easier method -- wash the tomato seeds off very very well, before planting. I'd recommend the second route. 😕, 😀.

  • @Poppy-ln9fh
    @Poppy-ln9fh 3 ปีที่แล้ว +42

    For myself I use old straw bails and grass clippings. I also put a sprinkling of cow manure in between layers to help with the microbial fauna. You could look for an area that has been logged out, their would be Mounds of sawdust left behind. The older the better, the sawdust won't pull nitrogen from any dirt because it has had time to start the brake down process. Hope this helps any gardeners out there.