Building Raised Beds: Lining The Raised Bed
Building Raised Beds: Lining The Raised Bed
Building Raised Beds: Lining The Raised Bed
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Choosing Your Materials When choosing materials for your raised bed, consider durability, toxicity, environmental impact, affordability, aesthetics, maintenance requirements, and how permanent or portable you want your raised bed to be. Reused materials tend to be the most affordable. Their environmental impact is low because they dont require forestry, mining, manufacture, or long-distance transport. Find free or low-cost materials on Craigslist or Freecycle, at your local salvage yard, or in your own backyard. The Ecology Centers EcoDirectory contains Bay Area resource listings, including local salvage yards. One low-tech method that saves money and has minimal environmental impact involves building a mound of soil and straw directly on top of the existing ground, without a structure to contain it. This method, which permaculturists favor, builds nutrients and adds tilth to impacted land. If your aim is to avoid toxics, this method might not be sufficient.
Some pressure treated wood is toxic, while some is not. The most toxic pressuretreated wood, chromated copper arsenate (CCA), can often be identified by its staple-like indentations and greenish tint, but not all types of CCA wood have these identifiers. To make matters more confusing, wood pressure-treated with Alkaline Copper Quartenary (ACQ), which is considered safe, also appears green. If the wood was bought or the structure built prior to 2003, the lumber was most likely treated with toxic CCA. To be sure, buy an arsenic test kit from your local hardware store or online. If your existing raised beds were built with CCA-treated lumber, remove the structure to avoid the continued migration of arsenic through the yard. Even if the soil is replaced, the arsenic will migrate into the new soil. Dispose of the wood at a local waste facility as construction debris. If you choose to keep the bed, you may grow ornamental plants in it rather than food.
If you use untreated wood for your bed, use natural wood treatments like flaxseed oil or wax. Linseed oil can contain toxic additives, so its best to avoid it. A wide variety of borate-based washes exist that are safer to use near food plants.
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To avoid toxics in soil such as lead or arsenic To avoid drainage problems that some soils can present To reduce back strain. Raised beds can be built at a good height for a wheelchair. To add an aesthetically pleasing feature in the garden To make it easier to add nutrients to the working layer of the soil To improve yields by reducing how much of the soil is walked on and compacted To clearly separate the growing area from pathways for easier weed control To enable gardening in paved spaces
Soil/straw mound Urbanite (broken concrete pieces) Brick or cinderblock Wood logs Bamboo
Very low Salvaged material has low impact. Low if reused, Medium if new. Low if scrap Especially low when grown domestically Low if reused Low High if new. Lower if reused. High High, or lower if FSC certified. Can be very high Medium ( does not decompose or recycle) Hazardous
Free to low Free to low Low when reused Free to low Moderate
Explore permaculture methods. Concrete less than one year old can leach lime, affecting soil pH. Lining the bed can prevent lime from entering the soil.
Metal siding Naturally treated reuse wood Plywood, pressboard, and painted woods Pressure treated wood Redwood or cedar (new) Stone (new) Plastic lumber
Line with fabric to delay rusting. Use nontoxic sealant on untreated wood (Flaxseed oil or wax) Avoid. Contains toxic components. See section on pressure treated wood.
HDPE and LPE are best plastic choices. Avoid due to toxic creosote.
Railroad ties
Very high
High
Moderate
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