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How to Start a Vegetable Garden: Building Raised Beds

If your soil isn’t the greatest or you just don’t feel like digging, raised beds can be a great solution

How to Build Raised Garden Beds
If your soil isn't the greatest or you just don't feel like digging, raised beds can be a great solution for your vegetable garden. Watch this video to learn how.
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      Steve Aitken, Danielle Sherry, Gary Junken, Kate Geruntho Frank, Cari Delahanty

      So you’re wondering how to start a vegetable or kitchen garden? Not to worry. Our seven-video series How to Start a Vegetable Garden will help you get your first veggie venture off to a good start. We’ll cover the basics: choosing a location, preparing the soil, building raised beds, starting your seedlings, and planting your garden.

      Episode 4: Building Raised Beds

      If your soil isn’t the greatest or you just don’t feel like digging, raised beds can be a great solution for your vegetable garden.

      Materials
      Raised beds can be made out of all different kinds of materials, but wood is the most common option. The obvious choice for your wood may seem like pressure-treated lumber, but because it contains copper, an untreated wood that weathers well might be a better option. Douglas fir is readily available in our part of the country and relatively inexpensive. Other choices might be cypress or redwood.

      Tools you’ll need

      • Cordless drill
      • 3.5-inch galvanized decking screws
      • Six 8-foot-long 2×6 boards
      • Six 4-foot-long 2×6 boards
      • Four 2-foot-long 4×4 boards

      Building the bed
      To make the long sides of the bed, screw three 8-foot 2×6 boards to two corner posts. Drilling pilot holes will make screwing into the wood a bit easier. Have an extra person around to help you position the boards correctly and to make sure they’re flush.

      To build the short sides, stand two of the constructed long ends upright about 4 feet apart. Screw the short 2×6 boards to the corner posts so that they’re flush. If you’re not building on level ground, a speed square and a level will come in extremely handy.

      See more videos in this series:

      1. Selecting a Site

      2. Testing Your Soil

      3. Removing Sod and Vegetation

      4. Building Raised Beds

      5. Starting Seeds Indoors

      6. Direct-Sowing Vegetable Seeds

      7. Planting Out

      Previous: How to Start a Vegetable Garden: Removing Sod and Vegetation Next: Finding Space for Veggies in a Small Yard
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      Fruits and Vegetables

      Fruits and Vegetables

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