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Raised
bed gardening puts the joy back in
planting flowers and
shrubs.
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Raised bed
gardening provides
beauty in '04
By
Norman Winter
MSU
Horticulturist
Central Mississippi Research & Extension
Center
The key
to happiness with flowers in 2004 may depend on raised
beds.
Twenty
years ago the phrase "raised bed gardening" conjured up
visions of railroad or landscape timbers encompassing the
vegetable garden. The reasons were simple: the soil was
yucky, and these walls of wood could hold in the perfect
organic and topsoil blends brought in by a truck.
From
the standpoint of flowers, the ultimate raised bed is a
large container filled with a good, light potting mix and
several species of flowers. How many of us as gardeners find
sizzle with flowers in a container but fizzle with those
same flowers in the landscape?
I
encourage beginning gardeners to visualize their flower bed
as a pot 8 to 10 inches high but perhaps covering 100 square
feet. In other words, create a large horizontal pot.
Very
few plants can thrive by simply digging a hole and planting.
Most of us do not have the ideal soil for annual or
perennial bedding plants. Roots of bedding plants have to
penetrate soils quickly, anchor plants and absorb water and
nutrients, often under adverse conditions.
In many
cases the lots where our homes are sitting have had the
topsoil scraped off and a material that is hardly suitable
for plant life brought in for the foundation. Unfortunately
that material also makes up the flower or shrub beds.
But all
is not lost. We can have beautiful flowers -- and many of
them are tougher in our climate than we ever dreamed -- but
we have to give their roots a good home. With such a great
importance aesthetically and financially to our home, it
only makes sense to do the job right the first time.
Plants
require oxygen, nutrients and water for proper growth. The
soil texture plays the most important role in determining
whether or not those three needs are met sufficiently to
allow the plant to become established and perform to
expectations.
Desirable
soil has the ability to hold water while allowing for
adequate drainage. It also provides adequate oxygen for root
development. Tight, heavy clay soils challenge the best of
gardeners.
Amending
the planting area is one of the best ways to overcome these
conditions. This can be done fairly easily and efficiently
by adding organic matter such as leaf mold, compost, peat
and sand. Incorporating a 3- to 4-inch layer of organic
matter with the native soil allows the bed to be built up --
a "raised" bed, if you wish -- and provides excellent
drainage.
Commercial
landscapers have an easier way to perform this task. After
the bed area is cleared of all unwanted vegetation, prepared
landscape planting mixes are placed in the bed. These mixes,
or blends, have some sort of retaining wall such as baked
enamel edging, heavy-duty vinyl, timbers, pavestone or rock.
Depending
on the depth of the enclosure, tilling may or may not be
necessary. Regardless, the soil will be loose for young
plants. These mixes are available by the bag or in bulk at
most garden centers.
Separating
the raised beds from the turf area with a retaining wall
makes a lot of sense. From an aesthetic standpoint, the
flowers or shrubs stand out, and the grass even looks
better.
It also
makes sense from the maintenance standpoint. The beds
normally have different water requirements than the turf
area. Zoned irrigation is easily accomplished. But the real
ease comes from using a string trimmer or edger around the
bed's wall. This can be done in minutes versus the labor it
would take to get rid of the grass that will encroach easily
if no barrier is present.
Raised-bed
gardening puts the joy back in planting flowers and shrubs.
Your dollars will be wisely invested and your home will
increase in beauty and value.
-30-
Released:
January 8, 2004
Contact: Norman
Winter,
(601) 857-2284
Editor's
Note: Ideal publication dates of Southern Gardening columns
are within one month of their release. Editors should
examine older columns carefully for any information that
could be time sensitive.
Publications
may download
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