Gardeners are notorious for getting ideas and finding new
ways to use space in their garden by visiting garden stores and nurseries.
After the fall cold snap when our gardens succumb and we find ourselves sad
about the abrupt end to the season, we just can’t stop thinking about
gardening.
While you may know that raised beds are a great way to use space and
reach your veggies as they grow, you may like to see some ideas to ponder for next
season. A rectangle (pictured) is the most common shape for a raised bed and it
is generally recommended that it be 3-4 feet wide and about 6-8 feet long so
that you can reach if from each end. Shorter is just fine and having two or
more is often desired depending on how much produce and variety that you want
to grow.
Three tips in the mountains for new raised beds are to line the bottom
with hardware cloth to deter critters from digging from below, adding row
covers to warm the soil for seeds and keep insects and critters, including
birds, from snatching your seeds and seedlings, and adding a hoop and cover above
to let the plants grow in more even temperatures plus protect them from hail or
sunscald. Row covers are synthetic fabric from garden stores or even cotton
sheets. Plastic is ok for the hoop cover as long as the plastic doesn’t touch
the plants - or the hot or cold plastic will likely harm the plants.
A fun idea
recently spotted at a garden center is the wall garden (pictured) with multiple
smaller planters using vertical space instead of only horizontal space. Also in
the photos are vertical trellises that peas, beans, cucumbers or other vines
can grow up. Using good fresh amended garden soil or “topping off” an existing
raised bed with soil formulated with ingredients for raised beds will give your
seeds and seedlings the nutrients that they need.
In the upcoming winter months
there are many good CSU Extension Fact Sheets (FS) you may wish to read or
review about soil preparation (FS 7.235) plant selection for the mountains (FS
7.248), growing from seed (FS 7.409) pest control (FS 5.569), and new to
Colorado gardeners (FS 7.220 and 7.244) to plan for the warmth of next spring.
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