November 21, 2024

VIDEO: FREE | Easy | How to Build a Raised Garden Bed | Backyard Gardening | with Wood Pulp


FREE, Easy, How to Build a Raised Garden Bed | Backyard Gardening.. with Wood Pulp.
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Back to Eden Organic Gardening 101 Method with Wood Chips VS Leaves Composting Garden Soil #2 : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PAXrKFjs77o .

How to Build a Raised Wood Chip Organic Gardening Bed for beginners, Cheap Designs – Part 1. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AVaFsORKhl8 .

26 thoughts on “VIDEO: FREE | Easy | How to Build a Raised Garden Bed | Backyard Gardening | with Wood Pulp

  1. I am going to give that one a shot. However, I fear the box will desintegrate with watering so, maybe it would be an idea to place the box inside a plastic trash bag (bottom open), and fold the excess height into the box. This would keep the shape of the box and stops it from falling apart once it is soaked and the roots etc. push against the wet cardboard.

  2. Truth about store potatoes. …grocery store potatoes are treated with a chemical called “Clorpropham”. This chemical is also sold under the names Beet-Kleen, Bud Nip, Chloro IPC, CIPC, Furloe, Sprout Nip, Spud-Nic, Taterpex, Triherbide-CIPC and Unicrop CIPC.
    Second, the potatoes are exposed to so-called “low level” nuclear radiation. This is called irradiation. This is why we have to buy sprout potatoes. There killing is, with all rose camicals. Sad, the US has more chemicals then the rest of the world.

  3. Hi ,I have a question about if someone lives in an apartment and does not have access to the ground ,could i use this method by putting cardboard box in a big plastic tub on deck or indoors? I have never had a garden , thank you and may God bless

  4. Thanks for this video. In previous years, I only kept big cardboard boxes to hold all my kitchen scraps & cold compost. Now 1/2 my garden is made of cardboard box planters. When CA announced the lockdown, I gathered all my cardboard boxes and filled them with old soil & compost mix. Ordered Potting mixes & seeds to be delivered to my house, and got planting asap. Gardening has kept me sane during this pandemic. Every time there's a new supply shipment, new boxes get added. I'm worried my entire garden will be cardboard box planters! Haha

  5. Ah . . . mulches. It seems so easy! So, question . . . in an effort to keep the soil covered (which I agree with), how do you choose a mulch that won't physically impair the ability of the sprouts to bust through AND won't provide a haven for cut worms, mice, or other pests that interfere with germination and early growth? For example, straw in zone 10A could attract mice (and leave seeds behind) and it's a dense physical barrier to sprouting; coconut coir and newspaper/cardboard can attract pill bugs that love to munch on tiny sprouts; and, homemade compost may have bits of stuff still in it that provides a habitat for cutworms . . . . How do we keep the soil cover and still sprout seeds? Is it timing thing?

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