To learn more about Vegega Raised bed gardens and to get 10% off your order check out Vegega at www.vegega.com/?ref=lth10. or use coupon code LTH10 at checkout.
Please please put clay 3/4 to the top of the bed because compost will shrink 1/2 it’s size in one year worms will eat it all up and you will be lacking minerals which you can only get from your clays and stones as they weather the worms bring them to the top
@@karenhudson8862I've tried 4 different cards and nothing will go thru.... been trying to get someone to call me.. they said their landline isn't working. . The person emails me back telling me to break it down into 3 purchases.. and possibly send them a picture of my cards 😂 Are we getting scammed... nothing has gone thru in any of my cards yet.. but now I wonder if I need to get all my numbers changed. Holy moly. Ridiculous. I really really really liked these planters... and on sale currently... hmpffffff
Thank you! I just ordered 6 of the same garden bed through your link, love the savings. No shipping charges, great deal! I also ordered the weed fabric, lots of pots etc... through your link, more $'s saved. Thank you!
What about using the last area of the old covered area next to your new raised beds to plant just perennial flowers. It would be a great area to bring bees and butterflies to your garden area too! And also an area where you can have cut flowers - maybe even to bring to the farmers market! I love watching you guys! God bless you and your family.
This is brilliant in several ways! Beauty! food for Polinators! Fragrance! Gifts! Poporrderi(sp?)! Dried Flowers! Added income stream! Mail order Lavender both for Cooking , Scent, and Decoration, Oh just how wonderful! Grateful for finding you. All the best
I left stands of clover right next to my garden just for this reason.....I still had a awful year...the only thing I got was about,3 messes of Red Bean's.... absolutely nothing else out of 8 rows 😢😢😢
I purchased those very same raised beds last Fall. I planted in them this Spring. The only thing I regret is not putting hardwire cloth under them. I ended up with rats getting into a few of them. I plan to take the soil out and do that before replanting next Spring.
I place a row of car board and sticks and fill with leaves in new raised beds in fall and fill overfill with dirt wet the whole thing and fill again in spring with compost.
It works well, but you will have a lot more settling as the logs break down, even years later. For the price I think compost is a good idea here to avoid heavy settling later.
Once you pull up the old landscape fabric, you could scatter wildflower seeds. Also, you could put two or three of your round containers in each corner and fill them with flowers to attract pollinators. Everything looks lovely!
So cool. It seems that a lot of people are switching their gardens into raised beds. So much easier to control. Less weeds. Cant wait to see how the new garden grows. Lol. 💜. Some people added branches, cardboard and other compostable materials in the bottoms of the beds. It takes a lot of soil to fill all of those beds.
It seems that these beds are not as deep as those where I have seen people use wood scraps in the bottom. I was actually kind of surprised at the size Kevin and Sarah chose..having watched them garden for a few years I cannot imagine this will be enough space for the amounts they grow, unless they intend to cut down.
Since they are going so well in the greenhouse and are putting freeze dried food up I think it has given them a lot of freedom to scale down the outdoor garden. 21 is a big investment, but if it's not enough they can always expand next year. The better soil will help yields immensely.
I saw ppl using their old plastic bottles & jugs. Makes sense to me... the main reason for putting things in the bottom is to raise level of garden. In the 80s I watch a guy do square foot garden method. Bartholomew??? He explained several benefits (never walk on the bed to help earth stay soft). I did some container gardening back then. Now I'm OLD. Raised beds & containers make Sense
Looks great. My biggest challenge was how I was going to fill my bed as well. I ended up using fine mulched leaves from my property filled halfway up, top dressing with compost.
ALSO U can use cardboard boxes toilet paper and paper towel rollers, newspaper, cardboard egg cartons. Those are the brown parts (carbon ) of the composting recipe. And you can also put in "Green" stuff (nitrogen, but not always green) like kitchen scraps, dry grass clippings, too. And if you get the chance, I would fill it up and a bit higher than top of bed because it is going to rot way way down. If you need anything, let me know. I really good at scrounging up stuff for the garden. Many grand blessings everyone everywhere and always.
Love your methodical process. Over time one of the best parts of your vlog is the fact that you guys finish what you start before you start another big project.
So excited for you guys. Wish my spouse would get on board with the homestead life. It's ok that I do it and they eat it but little to no help with activities or care of the homestead. It gets overwhelming and exhausting doing it alone and working but I keep on keeping on for the kids and the hope that they will wake up one day and join in. 😂
I feel your pain. My husband does nothing to help, but is more than willing to let me start seeds, plant, nourish, weed, pick, preserve, cook, etc. It gets exhausting doing my share of the farm, AND his, while he gets glued to his tablet, watching movies. Sigh. 😐 AND, I do the mowing (4acres), trimming, hauling, repairs, animals, etc. He will help me (usually), if I specifically ask, but still grumbles. I'm 70 yo, 7 years older than he, and have numerous health issues. He's perfectly strong and healthy, but lazy.
@@susanmcconnell6041 Take a year off where you can (of course animals need tending too). Once he sees you are not doing what you used to do, and the pantry is not being refilled, he'll ask why, all you have to say is," I'm getting too old for this, and without help, I've decided to retire from gardening, other than my flowers. Sorry, honey, I just can't do it anymore, we can buy at the Farmer's Markets. Oh, and I'm thinking of budgeting for someone to come in to mow the property, so I can enjoy my retirement". lol One shopping trip to the grocers, where he'll get an awakening of just how expensive it is, the cost of the trip to and from the grocers, and having to pay someone to come in and tend to the property, and the money that will be spent at the Farmer's Markets, he'll either start helping or not. lol You shouldn't have to ask for help. Good Luck.
Oh gosh…i cannot agree more. And those life tips will be an eye opener for sure. I always tell myself that by the end of any labor sessions of either mowing the lawn, landscaping or tending to crops, theres a satisfaction & you gave yourself a whole body to shoulder exercise that will benefit your health in the future and make you both mentally & physically alert and stronger.
In our experience the steel raised beds will at least double the yields from the garden (or more) and significantly reduce the amount of work. The biggest challenge for us was watering by hand the first year. Last year we designed a custom irrigation system using PVC buried pipe, PVC risers, and drip tape in each bed. It worked like a charm. We ordered six more beds this year for a total of 18 all together. We make our own compost from leaves, garden, kitchen, and yard waste as our property is heavily wooded. I rotate the open compost piles with my tractor. We used smaller 3 x 6 galvanized steel beds from Northern Tool and Equipment. They are on sale once in a while for around $42.
Looks great! I think I'd be tempted to drop a few earthworms into each raised bed. Will you lay out drip irrigation as well? The grid of hoses would be an interesting challenge. I wonder if you could suspend the main lines overhead and drop down into each bed, to keep from having them running along the ground. If you used a sturdy suspension system, it could double as a support for trellises.
Wish I would have talked to you before you filled those beds!! The garden space looks amazing and I am a fan of a weed free environment. However, cutting holes in the fabric inside of the boundaries of the beds would have been a HUGE plus towards promoting mycorrhizal fungi transfer to the deeper earth under those beds. Not to mention worms and tap root planting benefits.. I would love to chat with you about some regenerative gardening ideas that could benefit your garden! (Mike)
Gosh, I've never been so glad to live about 2 miles from a place that sells this stuff and is organic. We can just run down and get a pick up load whenever we want. Except Sundays. They are closed on Sundays. Then we can back right up to the new raised bed and kind of push/sweep the soil right off into it. One year when we built a bunch of beds, they let us by the soil at the dump truck price, but let us come get it one pickup load at a time so we could do the push/sweep method. Saved us money and them time. It saved us so much work, we didn't have farm equipment to help us, but you gotta do what you gotta do. I'm a couple of videos behind, but will get caught back up.
If anyone is looking for other ideas: filling bottoms of raised beds with free old logs/sticks, then free manure, and then a couple inches of good compost on top would be much cheaper and add more nutrients. The logs will break down and decompose and you just add a little compost on top each year from your stash.
@@secretjourney4815 absolutely, I'm a 6x cancer conqueror and for a time I couldn't get off the ground... my hubbie made me raised beds and I could sit in the side and garden with my oxygen and IV's and I was good. I also was in a wreck about 10 years ago, was hit from behind and it broke my neck and back in 2 places... sooo the 17" table beds are perfect for me... we also have horse water troughs and they are great as well. Blessings
The garden looks amazing! Have you thought about putting a raised bed by your house? A kitchen garden, with the herbs you use most often in cooking ready at hand; I know you mentioned planting the herbs in that garden, but perhaps you use some on a daily basis... just a thought! I love your shirt messages, by the way!😉
I put wheat straw bales in my raised beds and then 6" of compost on top. Each year it settles so I add leaves and food scraps in the off season and a little more compost at next planting.
May I suggest using cover crops to keep your soil covered this winter. The soil microbes are always happier when there is a crop photosynthesizing in the soil. I use White Dutch Clover, but there are many inexpensive choices. Next spring, you can turn it under for green manure, or cut it back to the ground and use it for mulch or compost. Cover crops are a cheap way to prevent erosion and add valuable nutrients to the soil.
If those beds are 100% compost, a covercrop is a zero-sum game. The CC will simply deplete the nutrition in the compost unless fertilized. They may get a small net gain with above & below organic mass. Hard to say. If those beds had 12" or so of real dirt, covercropping would make sense. They might as well cover the top of the bedds with mulch to overwinter & either buy compost in the spring or start their own composting operation to feed those beds. They are on the compost treadmill now.
I love what you’ve done with the place! Excellent job!!! That was a lot of hard work that will absolutely pay off in the future! I’m kind of surprised that you made the wood border all the way around, though. I would’ve thought you would leave at least one of the wood planks absent so that you could get wheel barrels, wagons, and if need be the tractor in there a little more easily. But, you do you! I can’t wait to see how this turns out for you! 💙💙💙
We have very rocky clay soil here, too. Several years ago, we went to all container gardening and it has been an amazing lifesaver!! We even bought containers just like yours and put them on that same landscape fabric. We also built rows of boxes and put up cattle panel fences behind them for the climbing vegetables. It is fabulous, lots of harvest, plus nice and neat to look at, with no weeding!!! Then we installed an automatic watering system. Beautiful garden, no bending, no weeding, no watering, just harvesting. Awesome!! Yours looks really great!
The best time is NOW to put fertilizer on top of the compost - before the rains. Fall rains will trickle down the fertilizer to the root zones, and any further settling of the compost, and topping off the beds, will have the proper depth of fertilizer layer in Spring - for planting.
I am so happy for you both! The compost looks amazing and lovin' your layout. I'm taking a few notes for my own future garden. Thank you for sharing your life and giving me inspiration that I can use for my own small garden.
This is the time of Year that I go on a Campaign to Liberate Red Wiggler Worms from the small refrigerators in Corner Deli Stores near Lakes & River which are plentiful in Northern Ohio. I seed my Raised Garden Beds when I first establish them with one container of RRW's per 4' X 8' X 2' (64 sq. ft.), adding a 2nd container of RWW's the following Spring and half of a container in the Spring of the 3rd year. I additional sprinkle them sparingly in the regular Flower & Shrub Beds and on the Lawn area. Red Wiggler Worms are prolific at reproducing and usually you will not have to add anymore after the third year. Beware that RWW's will wiggle away from Chemicals. Respect their Wisdom, they have been here longer then us.
You can use a worm tower to put your kitchen scraps in and it's sits vertically in each bed. Do a search for worm towers in raiised beds. It is about a four inch pvc pipe (from what I remember). The part that goes into the soil has circles cut in so the worms crawl in and out. You put something on top to keep flies and other bugs out.
Your RUclips channel is my favorite overall. I am normally a silent viewer but I have to say your teamwork is just amazing. May God bless you and keep you. Sandy
Raised beds are probably easier as you get older, but I love my dirt garden. My pumpkins are huge this year and it is the first year I have raised them. So excited I have a pumpkin patch this year!
pumpkins can be planted in the raised bed for the good soil, and the vines trained to sprawl along the ground....I would prob put them in one of the outside beds where they have extra space.
You guys work so well together and I like the way you think out all the pro and cons when it comes to all your projects . The new raised beds area looks great.
There’s a guy I’ve used near Seymour who claims he’s selling compost that’s supplemented with natural fertilizers but the quality was inconsistent and his delivery charge almost doubled over a 6 year span to our farm near Mountain Grove which is 30 miles. So when his delivery charge got to $75 for a 10 yard load we gave up on using them. Your deal looks a lot better depending on distances. Folks from other areas don’t realize our state crop here in the Missouri Ozark’s is rocks. We aren’t blessed with the great soil they have up north or over near the Mississippi River.
Looks really good! I can't wait to see them full of plants. I am blessed with both a nice back yard while living in an apartment and a son with a sawmill, so I have been making small, raised beds out of wood that are tall and bottomless, that fit nicely around my fence. I designed them small enough that I can use them to compost the yard debris under soil I buy and move them around as needed.
A little tip when using staples. If you hold one prong in your left hand and one in your right, and stretch the staples out a little. Then with one hand, push it back to its original opening then hammer in the staple staple will want to spring out while in the ground, making it much harder for it to come back up. If you just hammered straight in, it is easier for the staple to come back up.
I ordered four from your web site. I've received all of them and getting ready to assemble them getting ready for next spring! All the best to you all. I saw the steam as he dumped it. Compost looks amazing. So excited for you all. Great system and looks so good! You all have made me want to get busy on mine! lol All the best to you both and thank you for sharing. I wondered how much was left. Wow, this looks great! All the best!
It will be fun to see next year at this time how much grass and weeds have come up through the weed fabric. The old weeds you laid over with the new fabric has punched holes the new fabric when you ran over it with the tractor. No matter how many layers or how careful you are. The weeds will always find a way to grow. Hopefully you can get your mower in between the raised beds. All and all it looks really nice.
Hi there. New to your space and love watching what you're doing and how you guys work together. Can't wait to see more and learn from you. Just one thing that worried me. Here where I live, we are being warned about breathing in the dust from compost,(even organic), as it has been known to cause serious conditions in the lungs. We are told to wear masks when digging, handling and spreading. Please be careful. 🙂 Look forward to your next episode.
Looks great guys! Over time you will learn that the landscape fabric is a waste of time and money in the long term in your particular setup with fields surrounding your garden, as a covered area that large exposed to the wind you will not be able to keep clean of dirt, leaves, debris, seeds, etc coming in with the wind, and over time it will fill in naturally unless you sweep or vacuum it constantly in all seasons except winter. I have tried doing large areas like this shown in your video, several times, and they look great the first year, but then steadily fill in with detritus starting year 2 and you will end up with all kinds of weeds as time progresses unless you spend many many hours each year keeping it perfectly clean. Then your option is to lay more expensive fabric down again, fasten it all in place, again, for three more years, repeat cycle....
Anyone wanting to fill raised beds…use a cheaper material for your fill. Save your compost for the last 3-4”. I use loam sand or heavy clay mix first. A better alternative for raised beds is to buy used R-panel and build your raised beds to your desired length. R-panel is 36” wide by whatever length..cut it down the middle and it gives you 18” height beds. Make you ends the width that you want. I set my beds with enough width to run my zero turn and mow/weed eat between beds. Save the landscape fabric for growing in ground..onions, okra, peppers and melons.
Love the effort in planning and execution of everything you guys do. It’s professional in appearance, neat and efficient. Why many homesteaders don’t take the time to do their homework & take the time to establish greater permanence w/their setups - I do not understand. As you both know in the long run it saves money and time, while looking decent and in good order. God richly bless you both & ur new creative homestead avenues.
I just watched a guy who actually creates his own compost as the pathways BETWEEN his raised beds! I thought it was such an amazing idea. He just layers green and brown and then covers it with wood chips from his property, then walks on it for two years, and finally, scoops up each row as needed, and then uses it as mulch in his raised beds. Then he just starts again and redoes that pathway. I thought of you and thought you might be able to utilize this idea.
Just curious as to why, with such a large property as yours, that you don't have your own composting area? With all the animal clean out, grass clippings and dried leaves that will soon fall, you can have an excellent no food scrap compost to amend beds next year. Mix in a half yard of that purchased compost and let the worms and critters do their work. I don't recall you guys ever addressing this in a video.
I thought the same to be honest. My garden is 1/3 the size of theirs, and I have never bought compost, and just make it myself with leaves, table scraps, grass clippings and used coffee grinds. I also put lots of branches, sticks, leaves etc to fill up half of the beds before I add compost, and I use cardboard on base instead of weed fabric, to really make it inexpensive.
They do have a composting area where they put their manure and scraps and let the chickens turn it. They've done a video on it within the last couple of months. 😊
Awesome project and the blessings will be plentiful. May GOD BLESS YOU! You have 21 beds, I have only one but the pleasure of growing your own is absolutely rewarding.
Looks wonderful. I was surprised how much my soil settled the first year. was wondering if you should leave a section of the logs open to get a wheelbarrow in for refilling beds and harvesting lots of produce. I would be so excited for spring looking out at that every day.
Maybe they should have put more space between the 3 columns so they could drive the tractor in between them? Meaning the outside columns would be closer to the edge. Then, they could easily add compost to each end of the tub from the tractor bucket. Also use the tractor to bring in spring potted plants. When the season is over, pull out the old plants and into the tractor bucket. I avoid wheel barrels when I can. Just a lazy persons thought?
@@texancowboy9988 lazy is sometimes called just plain sensible you know. I'm kinda crippled so labor savers mean I get to garden myself. Many grand blessings everyone everywhere and always
VERY IMPORTANT RAISED BED TIP! Cover them with weed cloth when they are empty - now and as you empty them after a growing season. Weeds can and will get in them. The weed cloth also helps keep the soil moist and loose. Best of luck with them, you'll love raised bed gardening!
I am so thankful your doing this transition. It’s going to help me so much when planning my own. Finding the compost source alone is a weight lifted. Thank you so much!
I have raised beds and have placed 16 foot hog panels hooped from one bed to the next allowing verticle growth of pole beeans, scarlet runner beans, asian yard long beans, cucumbers, tonatoes and etc. Not all beds, but just what you want. Makes great shaded areas at the base for crops needing some shade. And a great place to take a break in the shade. Just an idea from the peanut gallery!
The white beds will work great in zone 7 and farther north, but beware of cooked roots farther south. Drip irrigation can help keep them cool. Good luck!
I enjoy your videos, you guys do a great job communicating with your audience. Kevin is a handy man and I’m sure you have a plan to access your raised beds with a wheel barrow when you need to add compost to them such as a ramp. What type of irrigation will you be using?
The new garden looks awesome! I'm looking forward to seeing how well they work for you. I've checked out the website and am thinking of getting one to start with for next spring. 😊
Looks so organized and beautiful. Just wondering are you going to mulch the beds before winter to help retain soil and nutrients? Also just thinking ahead maybe make a "ramp" of sorts for wheelbarrow or carts to get over the wood come season. Again looks amazing!
I'm wondering the same thing. I'd want to cover them in case seeds take hold and I have to deal with it in early spring but they'll probably get out there early.
Thank you for this video. I am currently in Minnesota but I have sold my farm, this Is what I plan to make my new garden. God bless you and thank you for all you guys do I
He said they (Vegega) did not sponser them in the video. Kevin and Sarah did alot of research, picked these beds. But they were able to get a 10 percent discount for us if we want to buy them. But they were not a sponser.
FYI Took class on raised beds and I was taught 1/3 compost 1/3 clay and 1/3 sand. I’m hoping your plants have enough moisture since your not putting any clay. I love your shirts Sarah!
Birdies garden beds are the best.i have three and are going to get more. Fill them with cardboard,green waste,branches logs or anything you would put in your compost bins. We used sugar cane mulch as well. Cheaper than buying and filling with compost or garden soil.
I live in Fort Worth, and when I put my landscape cloth in the wind made it more difficult to put it down, however even though it was early spring it was still hot enough that it was a blessing. We were still sweating buckets, but it would have been worse without the wind. Your new raised bed garden is beautiful. I hope y'all really enjoy it.
Great job guys! Question - what are your plans for watering the beds? We have raised beds and we live in southwest Missouri, so about 100 miles from you guys so our weather is very similar. We struggle with watering too much or not enough. Thanks!
Look real good .,what I enjoyed the most is the team work ..David and I my husband..always do things today.,almost daily.. we’ve been doing so many small little projects in the house painted the walls put a new TV mount up on the wall build a raised bed do so many small projects in my husband is very ill with cancer, but he feels like sometimes he wants to do these thing ,so I said OK so we’ve been doing a lot of little projects and At the end of the day He is happy with the end results of accomplishment.. Painting the dining room that’s been a big task putting a wall mount for the TV is harder than you think making a few race beds ., helping me haul the soil bags from the front yard to the back I need to get us a wheel barrel 🌱🌱
Ooooh, I wouldn't ask that. Lots of mean people will say it's none of your business although, as a viewer making them money by viewing a video, they make it your business.
It will be FUN to watch you organize your garden and grow food from the raised beds...! We are planning to move next year...and you both will be our teachers...! We want to have a garden EXACTLY what you are doing (except on a smaller scale)...! God Bless YOU BOTH...! Shelly 👍🍅🥦🫑🥒👍
Wow, it's $3,600 just for the containers! Not counting the landscaper fabric, the landscape timbers, the 12" galvanized spikes, and the compost. And I'm sure you'll be adding some type of finishing material over the landscapers cloth to protect it. That will bring this project in for a total of around $6,000 - $7,000. Not many people in the real world can afford this high dollar garden. It also reduces the growing area considerably. You'll end up with less than 25% of the actual plants you can plant vs the in ground space that you had. Wouldn't it have been a wiser choice to just add a thick layer of compost to the actual ground (to make your own soil better) and keep the growing area as large as it was before? That would have kept your harvest at the maximum amount for the square footage of the space used. Not reducing it by 75% ,just to look pretty. And not making your own soil better on your farm.
Cost aside, there are problems with trying to grow in compost only, heat build-up in raised beds, and watering system expenses. I've grown in west central Missouri for 30 years. You are correct that a long term soil build is the way to go. I do keep raised beds as well, but inground no till lasagna layering of a variety of composts and cover cropping and most importantly heavy mulching is more cost effective and productive in the long term.
Prior videos answer your questions. They used a year of time pulling stones out and adding compost to this area. Tractor tilled more stones out. They covered it in plastic to smother weed seeds and help the soil. Its just too much gravel. They want to grow less food. One child has moved out. Plus they have freeze dried a lot. Plus they have the gigantic high tunnel that grows better vegetables than the outdoors full season. The cost of the infrastructure initially is for something that will last 15 or more years. So its actually cheap container gardening. They will make plenty of their own compost from all their animal bedding. Their rabbit waste pellets have been their main fertilizer=free. They realize gardening while standing is less physical than squatting all day. It's their choice how they use their land. I just "root" for their success.
@@AussieTracy no judging, just experience. You suggest digging out the area to expose the clay bottom and bringing in soil to fill ..hahaha! You'd have one big muddy pond.
@@AussieTracy there is no jealousy here. I just don't waste. I'm just saying most people cannot afford that kind of expense. Building the soil takes at least 5 years. Gravel is great drainage.which is their base here. I am a long time viewer. I do know what they have done. I know they have 1 less child (grown) at home. It's not to make people mad or to say they made a bad decision. I just pointed out that most can't afford such a huge output. That this would not work for most people. It doesn't improve the soil either. You all don't understand what I'm saying. I like this channel. I like most of the things they do and congratulate them when I do. But I offer a different point of view if I don't. They do not take my comments wrong nor do they think I'm disrespectful. So you shouldn't either.
I really enjoyed this video because it was like watching a replay of what my husband and I did right down to who ran the tractor and who scooped the compost out of the bucket. I am super excited to watch your new garden space develop! Thank you for sharing. God Bless you both.
Great looking compost. Your veggies will thrive next year!! I wonder however how they could call it organic when a lot of the source is food scraps from these amusement parcs. I doubt if their food is all organic....
OH so organized and neat looking and love the landscape timber (I've used such timbers in my yard to surround a huge pine tree, flower beds and made a fence around 3 sides of my parking area using cinder blocks and the timbers. God bless.
5000 for the beds then the dirt? I liked it better when everyone on RUclips, used to show us poor people stuff we could do. I’m a widow, I can’t pay $250.00 each bed! Even buying one at a time.
They do what’s best for their family with their budget. And everyone on RUclips didn’t only show what to do on a limited budget. You are free to do whats best for you and your budget, but not necessary to post an angry message. These are nice folks who live off of their land through hard work and incredible perseverance. They should be applauded and congratulated, not shamed.
Wow! Realistically most can’t do this, not once did I say they were not nice people. I’ve met and talked with them a number of times, so I guess I would know. My point is , most people struggling to put food on the table and pay their bills, would like a more cost effective way of doing things. I’m paying back $90,000. I. cancer bills, I would like to see more reasonable raised beds. I’m not “ whining”, but honestly, most people can’t be this fancy. It was a statement. One I’m sure, resonated with many others. Be blessed♥️
Cost effective is inground uve already been shown that just as each RUclipsr starts that way then they get better stuff and out walks the gremlins because it’s a poor me I’m left behind guilt trip hahaha
you guys have to do a video for the Average Income person, who cannot afford those fancy vegagga gizmos, honestly you've got millions of dollars while the rest of us just won't be able to afford what you are featuring. Some of us have tended our gardens for 30 years and more, started with rocky clay soil which you have shunned, but we have done it the (hard) way that we could afford. We made our own compost out of kitchen scraps, twigs, grass clippings, leaves, old newspapers, whatever we could. I guess these OLD ways are too old for you. I wonder what type of world is coming when the old ways are forgotten, becuase it won't generate any "likes" on social media.
You are on to something. Look in to starting your channel where you tend to a garden with kitchen scraps and twigs. The more information is out there the better off everyone will be. Plus you can make millions while doing that.
@cherylanon5791 if what they’re doing bothers you so much why are you here? Instead of understanding this video for its intended reason, which is to give you IDEAS which you can incorporate in whatever set up you have, you decide to attack people that are giving you FREE content to look at. You are narrow-minded and short-sighted for sure. Do you write to the different networks like HGTV complaining how those people are doing things that don’t fit your lifestyle or your income? If you were curious instead of envious and jealous of someone else’s success, you could’ve done an internet search and find that these people are not making millions like you stated. Trolls like you need to crawl back into your holes and stay there.
$34 per bed. Weather permitting, you could get that back in one season! Don't know if you have one but, a leaf blower would be good for keeping the landscape fabric between the beds clean.
Loved watching this project. I live on a mountain ridge with horrible "soil" so I'm squeezing in raised beds as I can and when I can. I can't wait to see what you all choose to plant in those planters.
My wife and I went with Olle Metal raised beds and we went with a modified hugelkulture method when we filled them. We placed a layer of hickory and oak tree rounds I’d split in half,then added a layer of leaves from the property ,then a layer of grass clippings,then we added a layer of native soil and then topped it all off with a mixture of super soil and compost. Our first season this year our cucumbers and tomatoes exploded in growth and yield. As the wood at the bottom breaks down and the soil level begins to lower we will be adding compost from the compost system I built and should in theory have a no till garden bed that will be growing year round with seasonal crops. You are going to enjoy the raised beds.
You guys are so much fun to watch. I love how you work together. One thing…..You’re gonna need a couple ramps to get your wheel barrow in and out easily. 😊
To learn more about Vegega Raised bed gardens and to get 10% off your order check out Vegega at www.vegega.com/?ref=lth10. or use coupon code LTH10 at checkout.
PLEASE, PLEASE plant a cover crop now or next spring you will have dead soil/microbe's and no heathy plants
Please please put clay 3/4 to the top of the bed because compost will shrink 1/2 it’s size in one year worms will eat it all up and you will be lacking minerals which you can only get from your clays and stones as they weather the worms bring them to the top
Are these shipped from overseas? My card got a fraud alert on the international purchase.
@@karenhudson8862I've tried 4 different cards and nothing will go thru.... been trying to get someone to call me.. they said their landline isn't working. . The person emails me back telling me to break it down into 3 purchases.. and possibly send them a picture of my cards 😂
Are we getting scammed... nothing has gone thru in any of my cards yet.. but now I wonder if I need to get all my numbers changed. Holy moly. Ridiculous. I really really really liked these planters... and on sale currently... hmpffffff
Thank you! I just ordered 6 of the same garden bed through your link, love the savings. No shipping charges, great deal! I also ordered the weed fabric, lots of pots etc... through your link, more $'s saved. Thank you!
What about using the last area of the old covered area next to your new raised beds to plant just perennial flowers. It would be a great area to bring bees and butterflies to your garden area too! And also an area where you can have cut flowers - maybe even to bring to the farmers market! I love watching you guys! God bless you and your family.
This is brilliant in several ways! Beauty! food for Polinators! Fragrance! Gifts! Poporrderi(sp?)! Dried Flowers! Added income stream! Mail order Lavender both for Cooking , Scent, and Decoration, Oh just how wonderful! Grateful for finding you. All the best
I left stands of clover right next to my garden just for this reason.....I still had a awful year...the only thing I got was about,3 messes of Red Bean's.... absolutely nothing else out of 8 rows 😢😢😢
@@conniepitts8392 😢
Fortunate is the man who has a wife that’s right there to work by his side. Love you two. Praying that God blesses your efforts.
What you guys have done is every gardeners dream, so beautiful, I can’t wait to see your harvest next year. So happy for you
Agreed ❤
PLEASE, PLEASE plant a cover crop now or next spring you will have dead soil/microbe's and no heathy plants
You’ve got that right, a dream 😊
I purchased those very same raised beds last Fall. I planted in them this Spring. The only thing I regret is not putting hardwire cloth under them. I ended up with rats getting into a few of them. I plan to take the soil out and do that before replanting next Spring.
The raised beds are great. To save on soil, its great to fill the bottom of the beds with logs branches grass and leaves.
I place a row of car board and sticks and fill with leaves in new raised beds in fall and fill overfill with dirt wet the whole thing and fill again in spring with compost.
It works well, but you will have a lot more settling as the logs break down, even years later. For the price I think compost is a good idea here to avoid heavy settling later.
Once you pull up the old landscape fabric, you could scatter wildflower seeds. Also, you could put two or three of your round containers in each corner and fill them with flowers to attract pollinators. Everything looks lovely!
So cool. It seems that a lot of people are switching their gardens into raised beds. So much easier to control. Less weeds. Cant wait to see how the new garden grows. Lol. 💜. Some people added branches, cardboard and other compostable materials in the bottoms of the beds. It takes a lot of soil to fill all of those beds.
Yes we used logs hay and cardboard
It seems that these beds are not as deep as those where I have seen people use wood scraps in the bottom. I was actually kind of surprised at the size Kevin and Sarah chose..having watched them garden for a few years I cannot imagine this will be enough space for the amounts they grow, unless they intend to cut down.
Since they are going so well in the greenhouse and are putting freeze dried food up I think it has given them a lot of freedom to scale down the outdoor garden. 21 is a big investment, but if it's not enough they can always expand next year. The better soil will help yields immensely.
How will you be irrigating the beds? It would be nice to see a video showing how you’ll be doing that.
I saw ppl using their old plastic bottles & jugs. Makes sense to me... the main reason for putting things in the bottom is to raise level of garden.
In the 80s I watch a guy do square foot garden method. Bartholomew??? He explained several benefits (never walk on the bed to help earth stay soft). I did some container gardening back then.
Now I'm OLD. Raised beds & containers make Sense
Looks great. My biggest challenge was how I was going to fill my bed as well. I ended up using fine mulched leaves from my property filled halfway up, top dressing with compost.
ALSO U can use cardboard boxes toilet paper and paper towel rollers, newspaper, cardboard egg cartons. Those are the brown parts (carbon ) of the composting recipe. And you can also put in "Green" stuff (nitrogen, but not always green) like kitchen scraps, dry grass clippings, too.
And if you get the chance, I would fill it up and a bit higher than top of bed because it is going to rot way way down. If you need anything, let me know. I really good at scrounging up stuff for the garden.
Many grand blessings everyone everywhere and always.
Thank you! ❤️
@@mariae6942 my pleasure and anytime and delighted to help. 👍👍
Many grand blessings everyone everywhere and always
Hugelkultur will save time and money 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽 wait until you wet the soil settles about four inches 🥹Looking so beautiful!!
Love your methodical process. Over time one of the best parts of your vlog is the fact that you guys finish what you start before you start another big project.
So excited for you guys. Wish my spouse would get on board with the homestead life. It's ok that I do it and they eat it but little to no help with activities or care of the homestead. It gets overwhelming and exhausting doing it alone and working but I keep on keeping on for the kids and the hope that they will wake up one day and join in. 😂
I feel your pain. My husband does nothing to help, but is more than willing to let me start seeds, plant, nourish, weed, pick, preserve, cook, etc. It gets exhausting doing my share of the farm, AND his, while he gets glued to his tablet, watching movies. Sigh. 😐 AND, I do the mowing (4acres), trimming, hauling, repairs, animals, etc. He will help me (usually), if I specifically ask, but still grumbles. I'm 70 yo, 7 years older than he, and have numerous health issues. He's perfectly strong and healthy, but lazy.
@@susanmcconnell6041 Take a year off where you can (of course animals need tending too). Once he sees you are not doing what you used to do, and the pantry is not being refilled, he'll ask why, all you have to say is," I'm getting too old for this, and without help, I've decided to retire from gardening, other than my flowers. Sorry, honey, I just can't do it anymore, we can buy at the Farmer's Markets. Oh, and I'm thinking of budgeting for someone to come in to mow the property, so I can enjoy my retirement". lol One shopping trip to the grocers, where he'll get an awakening of just how expensive it is, the cost of the trip to and from the grocers, and having to pay someone to come in and tend to the property, and the money that will be spent at the Farmer's Markets, he'll either start helping or not. lol You shouldn't have to ask for help. Good Luck.
Oh gosh…i cannot agree more. And those life tips will be an eye opener for sure. I always tell myself that by the end of any labor sessions of either mowing the lawn, landscaping or tending to crops, theres a satisfaction & you gave yourself a whole body to shoulder exercise that will benefit your health in the future and make you both mentally & physically alert and stronger.
I love how much thought you two put in to all your projects! It looks beautiful❤
In our experience the steel raised beds will at least double the yields from the garden (or more) and significantly reduce the amount of work. The biggest challenge for us was watering by hand the first year. Last year we designed a custom irrigation system using PVC buried pipe, PVC risers, and drip tape in each bed. It worked like a charm. We ordered six more beds this year for a total of 18 all together. We make our own compost from leaves, garden, kitchen, and yard waste as our property is heavily wooded. I rotate the open compost piles with my tractor. We used smaller 3 x 6 galvanized steel beds from Northern Tool and Equipment. They are on sale once in a while for around $42.
Great comment! Thanks for the info!
You guys drill drainage holes in the containers?
Looks great! I think I'd be tempted to drop a few earthworms into each raised bed. Will you lay out drip irrigation as well? The grid of hoses would be an interesting challenge. I wonder if you could suspend the main lines overhead and drop down into each bed, to keep from having them running along the ground. If you used a sturdy suspension system, it could double as a support for trellises.
It's amazing but worms still cone up through the weed fabric. I've watched them. Although yes, I deliberately add a worm or 2 in my raised beds
Wish I would have talked to you before you filled those beds!! The garden space looks amazing and I am a fan of a weed free environment. However, cutting holes in the fabric inside of the boundaries of the beds would have been a HUGE plus towards promoting mycorrhizal fungi transfer to the deeper earth under those beds. Not to mention worms and tap root planting benefits.. I would love to chat with you about some regenerative gardening ideas that could benefit your garden! (Mike)
Why is seeing those containers filled with soil the most exciting and gratifying thing I've seen in a long time? Love it.
I know what you mean. I love the look of the freshly prepared garden.
Raised beds is the only way to go
Switched myself three years ago
You’re going to love the results
I would still add tree trimming or small logs, limbs to the bottom of each of your beds, Hügelkultur style.
Gosh, I've never been so glad to live about 2 miles from a place that sells this stuff and is organic. We can just run down and get a pick up load whenever we want. Except Sundays. They are closed on Sundays. Then we can back right up to the new raised bed and kind of push/sweep the soil right off into it. One year when we built a bunch of beds, they let us by the soil at the dump truck price, but let us come get it one pickup load at a time so we could do the push/sweep method. Saved us money and them time. It saved us so much work, we didn't have farm equipment to help us, but you gotta do what you gotta do. I'm a couple of videos behind, but will get caught back up.
If anyone is looking for other ideas: filling bottoms of raised beds with free old logs/sticks, then free manure, and then a couple inches of good compost on top would be much cheaper and add more nutrients. The logs will break down and decompose and you just add a little compost on top each year from your stash.
I could sense Sarah’s joy getting her hands in the amazing soil. Beautiful job!
Looks great! We switched to raised beds 20+ years ago due to health issues... we've never looked back! Y'all will love it.
Blessings ❤
Do you think raised beds help with back pain?
@@secretjourney4815 absolutely, I'm a 6x cancer conqueror and for a time I couldn't get off the ground... my hubbie made me raised beds and I could sit in the side and garden with my oxygen and IV's and I was good.
I also was in a wreck about 10 years ago, was hit from behind and it broke my neck and back in 2 places... sooo the 17" table beds are perfect for me... we also have horse water troughs and they are great as well.
Blessings
The prettier I made my garden area the more I absolutely loved and enjoyed it. It all looks WONDERFUL GUYS!
The garden looks amazing! Have you thought about putting a raised bed by your house? A kitchen garden, with the herbs you use most often in cooking ready at hand; I know you mentioned planting the herbs in that garden, but perhaps you use some on a daily basis... just a thought! I love your shirt messages, by the way!😉
just off-camera is the house actually....so not too far of a walk to the garden :)
@@sewingstoryprojects6178 Unless it's raining, hailing, storming, tornado-ing, or blistering hot - then that walk might seem too far.🤣🤣
@@sth.777Lolol.
Blessings everyone everywhere
Those beds are going to work so well for you. It’s work setting them up but less back breaking work in the summer heat.😁🌹🌺
I put wheat straw bales in my raised beds and then 6" of compost on top. Each year it settles so I add leaves and food scraps in the off season and a little more compost at next planting.
May I suggest using cover crops to keep your soil covered this winter. The soil microbes are always happier when there is a crop photosynthesizing in the soil. I use White Dutch Clover, but there are many inexpensive choices. Next spring, you can turn it under for green manure, or cut it back to the ground and use it for mulch or compost. Cover crops are a cheap way to prevent erosion and add valuable nutrients to the soil.
Yep never leave your soil uncovered all season. Does the clover reseed itself in the beds ?
@@elainevang9114 No, it is removed before it goes to seed.
Grow alfalfa to enrich the soil with nitrogen
If those beds are 100% compost, a covercrop is a zero-sum game. The CC will simply deplete the nutrition in the compost unless fertilized. They may get a small net gain with above & below organic mass. Hard to say.
If those beds had 12" or so of real dirt, covercropping would make sense.
They might as well cover the top of the bedds with mulch to overwinter & either buy compost in the spring or start their own composting operation to feed those beds.
They are on the compost treadmill now.
@@flatsville9343 Actually, White Dutch Clover is a legume that fixes nitrogen in the soil. It shouldn't need fertilizer.
I love what you’ve done with the place! Excellent job!!! That was a lot of hard work that will absolutely pay off in the future! I’m kind of surprised that you made the wood border all the way around, though. I would’ve thought you would leave at least one of the wood planks absent so that you could get wheel barrels, wagons, and if need be the tractor in there a little more easily. But, you do you! I can’t wait to see how this turns out for you! 💙💙💙
They could use boards as ramps as needed.
We have very rocky clay soil here, too. Several years ago, we went to all container gardening and it has been an amazing lifesaver!! We even bought containers just like yours and put them on that same landscape fabric. We also built rows of boxes and put up cattle panel fences behind them for the climbing vegetables. It is fabulous, lots of harvest, plus nice and neat to look at, with no weeding!!! Then we installed an automatic watering system. Beautiful garden, no bending, no weeding, no watering, just harvesting. Awesome!! Yours looks really great!
The best time is NOW to put fertilizer on top of the compost - before the rains. Fall rains will trickle down the fertilizer to the root zones, and any further settling of the compost, and topping off the beds, will have the proper depth of fertilizer layer in Spring - for planting.
I would cover the compost in the raised beds with wet cardboard to keep weed seeds out.
I am so happy for you both! The compost looks amazing and lovin' your layout. I'm taking a few notes for my own future garden. Thank you for sharing your life and giving me inspiration that I can use for my own small garden.
You've dropped some serious coin - proof gardeners CAN buy happiness! Best wishes 🎉❤
I added redwigglers to my raised beds. They are very happy to help and are doing great 😊!
This is the time of Year that I go on a Campaign to Liberate Red Wiggler Worms from the small refrigerators in Corner Deli Stores near Lakes & River which are plentiful in Northern Ohio.
I seed my Raised Garden Beds when I first establish them with one container of RRW's per 4' X 8' X 2' (64 sq. ft.), adding a 2nd container of RWW's the following Spring and half of a container in the Spring of the 3rd year.
I additional sprinkle them sparingly in the regular Flower & Shrub Beds and on the Lawn area.
Red Wiggler Worms are prolific at reproducing and usually you will not have to add anymore after the third year.
Beware that RWW's will wiggle away from Chemicals. Respect their Wisdom, they have been here longer then us.
You can use a worm tower to put your kitchen scraps in and it's sits vertically in each bed. Do a search for worm towers in raiised beds. It is about a four inch pvc pipe (from what I remember). The part that goes into the soil has circles cut in so the worms crawl in and out. You put something on top to keep flies and other bugs out.
Your RUclips channel is my favorite overall. I am normally a silent viewer but I have to say your teamwork is just amazing. May God bless you and keep you. Sandy
I just love to watch how well you two work together. You are quite the team!! Congratulations on the new beds!
This is about the prettiest garden I’ve ever seen! I can’t wait to see it full of growing plants come spring!
Raised beds are probably easier as you get older, but I love my dirt garden. My pumpkins are huge this year and it is the first year I have raised them. So excited I have a pumpkin patch this year!
I have raised beds and still plant pumpkins on the ground. It just feels like pumpkins are meant to be sprawling all over the ground.
pumpkins can be planted in the raised bed for the good soil, and the vines trained to sprawl along the ground....I would prob put them in one of the outside beds where they have extra space.
Raised beds looks great. I like that there is plenty of room around them.
Really enjoyed watching. You are so organized and efficient. Can't wait to see spring planting.
I forgot to tell you how beautiful I think your raise containers are on the fabric great idea Lovett hope you do great this next coming year
You guys work so well together and I like the way you think out all the pro and cons when it comes to all your projects . The new raised beds area looks great.
There’s a guy I’ve used near Seymour who claims he’s selling compost that’s supplemented with natural fertilizers but the quality was inconsistent and his delivery charge almost doubled over a 6 year span to our farm near Mountain Grove which is 30 miles. So when his delivery charge got to $75 for a 10 yard load we gave up on using them. Your deal looks a lot better depending on distances.
Folks from other areas don’t realize our state crop here in the Missouri Ozark’s is rocks. We aren’t blessed with the great soil they have up north or over near the Mississippi River.
Looks really good! I can't wait to see them full of plants. I am blessed with both a nice back yard while living in an apartment and a son with a sawmill, so I have been making small, raised beds out of wood that are tall and bottomless, that fit nicely around my fence. I designed them small enough that I can use them to compost the yard debris under soil I buy and move them around as needed.
A little tip when using staples. If you hold one prong in your left hand and one in your right, and stretch the staples out a little. Then with one hand, push it back to its original opening then hammer in the staple staple will want to spring out while in the ground, making it much harder for it to come back up. If you just hammered straight in, it is easier for the staple to come back up.
I ordered four from your web site. I've received all of them and getting ready to assemble them getting ready for next spring! All the best to you all. I saw the steam as he dumped it. Compost looks amazing. So excited for you all. Great system and looks so good! You all have made me want to get busy on mine! lol All the best to you both and thank you for sharing. I wondered how much was left. Wow, this looks great! All the best!
@@martymalinowski6352 I received them (4) in less than a week. Very nice and I’m ready to begin putting together. All the best!
When I hit 60 years of age, I started doing raised gardening. So much easier on my back and less problems with rodents!
It looks amazing! We love our raised beds so much and have had wonderful results over the years. Kevin’s shirt is awesome😂
It will be fun to see next year at this time how much grass and weeds have come up through the weed fabric. The old weeds you laid over with the new fabric has punched holes the new fabric when you ran over it with the tractor. No matter how many layers or how careful you are. The weeds will always find a way to grow. Hopefully you can get your mower in between the raised beds. All and all it looks really nice.
Looks fantastic. Can’t wait to see all the plants in the spring.
Hi there. New to your space and love watching what you're doing and how you guys work together. Can't wait to see more and learn from you. Just one thing that worried me. Here where I live, we are being warned about breathing in the dust from compost,(even organic), as it has been known to cause serious conditions in the lungs. We are told to wear masks when digging, handling and spreading. Please be careful. 🙂 Look forward to your next episode.
What a beautiful garden space! Can’t wait to see them next spring as the plants start to grow! Well done
Looks great guys! Over time you will learn that the landscape fabric is a waste of time and money in the long term in your particular setup with fields surrounding your garden, as a covered area that large exposed to the wind you will not be able to keep clean of dirt, leaves, debris, seeds, etc coming in with the wind, and over time it will fill in naturally unless you sweep or vacuum it constantly in all seasons except winter. I have tried doing large areas like this shown in your video, several times, and they look great the first year, but then steadily fill in with detritus starting year 2 and you will end up with all kinds of weeds as time progresses unless you spend many many hours each year keeping it perfectly clean. Then your option is to lay more expensive fabric down again, fasten it all in place, again, for three more years, repeat cycle....
I love how organized and intentional you guys are! The area looks amazing & will be even more so when overflowing with all the green things 💚
Anyone wanting to fill raised beds…use a cheaper material for your fill. Save your compost for the last 3-4”. I use loam sand or heavy clay mix first. A better alternative for raised beds is to buy used R-panel and build your raised beds to your desired length.
R-panel is 36” wide by whatever length..cut it down the middle and it gives you 18” height beds. Make you ends the width that you want.
I set my beds with enough width to run my zero turn and mow/weed eat between beds. Save the landscape fabric for growing in ground..onions, okra, peppers and melons.
Love the effort in planning and execution of everything you guys do. It’s professional in appearance, neat and efficient. Why many homesteaders don’t take the time to do their homework & take the time to establish greater permanence w/their setups - I do not understand. As you both know in the long run it saves money and time, while looking decent and in good order. God richly bless you both & ur new creative homestead avenues.
I think many don’t do it because the initial cost is so much. These beds cost around $160 each.
@@lindabolden3223Not including the weed fabric.
I just watched a guy who actually creates his own compost as the pathways BETWEEN his raised beds! I thought it was such an amazing idea. He just layers green and brown and then covers it with wood chips from his property, then walks on it for two years, and finally, scoops up each row as needed, and then uses it as mulch in his raised beds. Then he just starts again and redoes that pathway. I thought of you and thought you might be able to utilize this idea.
Just curious as to why, with such a large property as yours, that you don't have your own composting area? With all the animal clean out, grass clippings and dried leaves that will soon fall, you can have an excellent no food scrap compost to amend beds next year. Mix in a half yard of that purchased compost and let the worms and critters do their work. I don't recall you guys ever addressing this in a video.
I thought the same to be honest. My garden is 1/3 the size of theirs, and I have never bought compost, and just make it myself with leaves, table scraps, grass clippings and used coffee grinds. I also put lots of branches, sticks, leaves etc to fill up half of the beds before I add compost, and I use cardboard on base instead of weed fabric, to really make it inexpensive.
Compost is gold.
They do have a composting area where they put their manure and scraps and let the chickens turn it. They've done a video on it within the last couple of months. 😊
@@cookingsherry8784 Yes, they did finally put out a video of their new compost area after my comment was made.🙂
@@honeycakes1693 black gold. 🖤
Awesome project and the blessings will be plentiful. May GOD BLESS YOU! You have 21 beds, I have only one but the pleasure of growing your own is absolutely rewarding.
Looks wonderful. I was surprised how much my soil settled the first year. was wondering if you should leave a section of the logs open to get a wheelbarrow in for refilling beds and harvesting lots of produce. I would be so excited for spring looking out at that every day.
Maybe they should have put more space between the 3 columns so they could drive the tractor in between them? Meaning the outside columns would be closer to the edge. Then, they could easily add compost to each end of the tub from the tractor bucket. Also use the tractor to bring in spring potted plants. When the season is over, pull out the old plants and into the tractor bucket. I avoid wheel barrels when I can. Just a lazy persons thought?
@@texancowboy9988 lazy is sometimes called just plain sensible you know.
I'm kinda crippled so labor savers mean I get to garden myself.
Many grand blessings everyone everywhere and always
@@texancowboy9988 work smarter, not harder!
Just make a small ramp to run a wheel barrel over or small lawn mower with a trailer or ATV.
VERY IMPORTANT RAISED BED TIP! Cover them with weed cloth when they are empty - now and as you empty them after a growing season. Weeds can and will get in them. The weed cloth also helps keep the soil moist and loose. Best of luck with them, you'll love raised bed gardening!
I am so thankful your doing this transition. It’s going to help me so much when planning my own. Finding the compost source alone is a weight lifted. Thank you so much!
I have raised beds and have placed 16 foot hog panels hooped from one bed to the next allowing verticle growth of pole beeans, scarlet runner beans, asian yard long beans, cucumbers, tonatoes and etc. Not all beds, but just what you want. Makes great shaded areas at the base for crops needing some shade. And a great place to take a break in the shade. Just an idea from the peanut gallery!
Looks wonderful can’t wait till spring to see it come to life
The white beds will work great in zone 7 and farther north, but beware of cooked roots farther south. Drip irrigation can help keep them cool. Good luck!
I enjoy your videos, you guys do a great job communicating with your audience. Kevin is a handy man and I’m sure you have a plan to access your raised beds with a wheel barrow when you need to add compost to them such as a ramp. What type of irrigation will you be using?
This is such a Blessing for you, Can't wait to see how productive it is for you next year. God's Blessing.
The new garden looks awesome! I'm looking forward to seeing how well they work for you. I've checked out the website and am thinking of getting one to start with for next spring. 😊
Kevin, I like your organization! You and Sarah set a great example of what it is like to be hard working!
Looks so organized and beautiful. Just wondering are you going to mulch the beds before winter to help retain soil and nutrients? Also just thinking ahead maybe make a "ramp" of sorts for wheelbarrow or carts to get over the wood come season. Again looks amazing!
I'm wondering the same thing. I'd want to cover them in case seeds take hold and I have to deal with it in early spring but they'll probably get out there early.
Awesome! I’d tarp that compost over winter so weeds don’t come up in the spring.
Cover your left over compost so weeds don’t grow ver the winter
Thank you for this video. I am currently in Minnesota but I have sold my farm, this
Is what I plan to make my new garden. God bless you and thank you for all you guys do
I
I thought you may have place some logs in the bottom of the beds first, fill them up a bit and use less dirt
really happy for you in your investment. Thanks for sharing. AKA, you make the 'Show Me' state proud!!!!!!!😄
HONEST QUESTION: Would you still have taken this route if Vegega(the raised bed company) didn’t sponsor you?
He said they (Vegega) did not sponser them in the video. Kevin and Sarah did alot of research, picked these beds. But they were able to get a 10 percent discount for us if we want to buy them. But they were not a sponser.
Why
My sister's quote: "Every party needs a pooper, that's we invited you." "Honesty has it's own reward." -Dad quote.
Why do you care if they are sponsored or not ?? Do you pay them ?? I just don´t understand that negativity !!
Non of your business I think
FYI
Took class on raised beds and I was taught 1/3 compost 1/3 clay and 1/3 sand. I’m hoping your plants have enough moisture since your not putting any clay. I love your shirts Sarah!
Thank you for the information, we were wondering what else should be added to the compost before planting.
I love my raised bed garden. I used Birdies raised beds - I think they are much the same as these. 🇦🇺
Birdies garden beds are the best.i have three and are going to get more.
Fill them with cardboard,green waste,branches logs or anything you would put in your compost bins.
We used sugar cane mulch as well.
Cheaper than buying and filling with compost or garden soil.
Fill the raised beds up to the last 15 inches with filling,and then add good organic compost with manure for the plants to grow in.
I live in Fort Worth, and when I put my landscape cloth in the wind made it more difficult to put it down, however even though it was early spring it was still hot enough that it was a blessing. We were still sweating buckets, but it would have been worse without the wind. Your new raised bed garden is beautiful. I hope y'all really enjoy it.
Great job guys! Question - what are your plans for watering the beds? We have raised beds and we live in southwest Missouri, so about 100 miles from you guys so our weather is very similar. We struggle with watering too much or not enough. Thanks!
Look real good .,what I enjoyed the most is the team work ..David and I my husband..always do things today.,almost daily.. we’ve been doing so many small little projects in the house painted the walls put a new TV mount up on the wall build a raised bed do so many small projects in my husband is very ill with cancer, but he feels like sometimes he wants to do these thing ,so I said OK so we’ve been doing a lot of little projects and At the end of the day He is happy with the end results of accomplishment..
Painting the dining room that’s been a big task putting a wall mount for the TV is harder than you think making a few race beds ., helping me haul the soil bags from the front yard to the back I need to get us a wheel barrel 🌱🌱
I know Kevin likes his math so was wondering what the total cost of everything for that garden area was you have built? It looks fabulous.
Ooooh, I wouldn't ask that. Lots of mean people will say it's none of your business although, as a viewer making them money by viewing a video, they make it your business.
It will be FUN to watch you organize your garden and grow food from the raised beds...! We are planning to move next year...and you both will be our teachers...! We want to have a garden EXACTLY what you are doing (except on a smaller scale)...! God Bless YOU BOTH...! Shelly 👍🍅🥦🫑🥒👍
Wow, it's $3,600 just for the containers! Not counting the landscaper fabric, the landscape timbers, the 12" galvanized spikes, and the compost. And I'm sure you'll be adding some type of finishing material over the landscapers cloth to protect it. That will bring this project in for a total of around $6,000 - $7,000. Not many people in the real world can afford this high dollar garden. It also reduces the growing area considerably. You'll end up with less than 25% of the actual plants you can plant vs the in ground space that you had.
Wouldn't it have been a wiser choice to just add a thick layer of compost to the actual ground (to make your own soil better) and keep the growing area as large as it was before? That would have kept your harvest at the maximum amount for the square footage of the space used. Not reducing it by 75% ,just to look pretty. And not making your own soil better on your farm.
Cost aside, there are problems with trying to grow in compost only, heat build-up in raised beds, and watering system expenses. I've grown in west central Missouri for 30 years. You are correct that a long term soil build is the way to go. I do keep raised beds as well, but inground no till lasagna layering of a variety of composts and cover cropping and most importantly heavy mulching is more cost effective and productive in the long term.
Prior videos answer your questions. They used a year of time pulling stones out and adding compost to this area. Tractor tilled more stones out. They covered it in plastic to smother weed seeds and help the soil. Its just too much gravel. They want to grow less food. One child has moved out. Plus they have freeze dried a lot. Plus they have the gigantic high tunnel that grows better vegetables than the outdoors full season. The cost of the infrastructure initially is for something that will last 15 or more years. So its actually cheap container gardening. They will make plenty of their own compost from all their animal bedding. Their rabbit waste pellets have been their main fertilizer=free. They realize gardening while standing is less physical than squatting all day. It's their choice how they use their land. I just "root" for their success.
@@AussieTracy no judging, just experience. You suggest digging out the area to expose the clay bottom and bringing in soil to fill ..hahaha! You'd have one big muddy pond.
@@AussieTracy there is no jealousy here. I just don't waste. I'm just saying most people cannot afford that kind of expense.
Building the soil takes at least 5 years. Gravel is great drainage.which is their base here.
I am a long time viewer. I do know what they have done. I know they have 1 less child (grown) at home.
It's not to make people mad or to say they made a bad decision. I just pointed out that most can't afford such a huge output. That this would not work for most people. It doesn't improve the soil either.
You all don't understand what I'm saying. I like this channel. I like most of the things they do and congratulate them when I do. But I offer a different point of view if I don't. They do not take my comments wrong nor do they think I'm disrespectful. So you shouldn't either.
Denise, you've obviously ticked off the cult viewers by injecting real cost analysis into this project.
I really enjoyed this video because it was like watching a replay of what my husband and I did right down to who ran the tractor and who scooped the compost out of the bucket. I am super excited to watch your new garden space develop! Thank you for sharing. God Bless you both.
Great looking compost. Your veggies will thrive next year!! I wonder however how they could call it organic when a lot of the source is food scraps from these amusement parcs. I doubt if their food is all organic....
OH so organized and neat looking and love the landscape timber (I've used such timbers in my yard to surround a huge pine tree, flower beds and made a fence around 3 sides of my parking area using cinder blocks and the timbers. God bless.
5000 for the beds then the dirt? I liked it better when everyone on RUclips, used to show us poor people stuff we could do. I’m a widow, I can’t pay $250.00 each bed! Even buying one at a time.
They do what’s best for their family with their budget. And everyone on RUclips didn’t only show what to do on a limited budget. You are free to do whats best for you and your budget, but not necessary to post an angry message. These are nice folks who live off of their land through hard work and incredible perseverance. They should be applauded and congratulated, not shamed.
Agree with Lisa. They’ve saved up for this. If others can’t afford it, no need to whine
Wow! Realistically most can’t do this, not once did I say they were not nice people. I’ve met and talked with them a number of times, so I guess I would know. My point is , most people struggling to put food on the table and pay their bills, would like a more cost effective way of doing things. I’m paying back $90,000. I. cancer bills, I would like to see more reasonable raised beds. I’m not “ whining”, but honestly, most people can’t be this fancy. It was a statement. One I’m sure, resonated with many others. Be blessed♥️
Cost effective is inground uve already been shown that just as each RUclipsr starts that way then they get better stuff and out walks the gremlins because it’s a poor me I’m left behind guilt trip hahaha
Tell your family to pool their gifts to you money and buy you a raised bed. Give them the link to the 10% discount.
Looks AWESOME! Suggestion: cover the compost dirt pile woth a tarp so it doesn’t wash away with the incoming rain
Great idea!
you guys have to do a video for the Average Income person, who cannot afford those fancy vegagga gizmos, honestly you've got millions of dollars while the rest of us just won't be able to afford what you are featuring. Some of us have tended our gardens for 30 years and more, started with rocky clay soil which you have shunned, but we have done it the (hard) way that we could afford. We made our own compost out of kitchen scraps, twigs, grass clippings, leaves, old newspapers, whatever we could. I guess these OLD ways are too old for you. I wonder what type of world is coming when the old ways are forgotten, becuase it won't generate any "likes" on social media.
You are on to something. Look in to starting your channel where you tend to a garden with kitchen scraps and twigs. The more information is out there the better off everyone will be. Plus you can make millions while doing that.
@@whitehorse1961love this answer!
@cherylanon5791 if what they’re doing bothers you so much why are you here? Instead of understanding this video for its intended reason, which is to give you IDEAS which you can incorporate in whatever set up you have, you decide to attack people that are giving you FREE content to look at. You are narrow-minded and short-sighted for sure. Do you write to the different networks like HGTV complaining how those people are doing things that don’t fit your lifestyle or your income? If you were curious instead of envious and jealous of someone else’s success, you could’ve done an internet search and find that these people are not making millions like you stated. Trolls like you need to crawl back into your holes and stay there.
$34 per bed. Weather permitting, you could get that back in one season!
Don't know if you have one but, a leaf blower would be good for keeping the landscape fabric between the beds clean.
U2 are brilliant, the way you plan ahead for life.😊
Loved watching this project. I live on a mountain ridge with horrible "soil" so I'm squeezing in raised beds as I can and when I can. I can't wait to see what you all choose to plant in those planters.
My wife and I went with Olle Metal raised beds and we went with a modified hugelkulture method when we filled them. We placed a layer of hickory and oak tree rounds I’d split in half,then added a layer of leaves from the property ,then a layer of grass clippings,then we added a layer of native soil and then topped it all off with a mixture of super soil and compost. Our first season this year our cucumbers and tomatoes exploded in growth and yield. As the wood at the bottom breaks down and the soil level begins to lower we will be adding compost from the compost system I built and should in theory have a no till garden bed that will be growing year round with seasonal crops. You are going to enjoy the raised beds.
Beds look so good and the soil looks wonderful. Can’t wait until you start planting. Your border will be the icing on the cake. 🥰
Your new raised beds look amazing! We also have a bulk organic composter in our area, so I think I'm going to look into it. Thanks for sharing! 💯
You guys are so much fun to watch. I love how you work together. One thing…..You’re gonna need a couple ramps to get your wheel barrow in and out easily. 😊
This is do pleasing on the eyes for someone with OCD!
That's a Gardner's dream garden. I love it. Great job.
In the spring, you’ll have to pull up a board so you can get a wheelbarrow in there when you top off the raised beds. I love this!