Building a Raised Garden: The Mator Patch

Building a Raised Garden: The Mator Patch
In this Instructable I will show you how I built a raised garden with minimal cost and created a nice landscape at he same time.

You are more than welcome to post suggestions for improvements or other ways that I could have gone with this project, actually i encourage it.

Thanks for looking
 
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Step 1Location, Location, Location

Location, Location, Location
I had this corner of the yard that was mess since I had bought the house. I got really tired of seeing it but didn't know what to do with it. I had planted a tree in it but the dog kept digging in the dirt and finally it had started to make it then we had a frost that killed it.

So here was my dilemma. I needed to do something with that back corner but it also had a pile of dirt and rock in the area. the previous owners had laid concrete and piled the excess dirt in the corner and throughout the yard.

As you will see in the pictures I have some crazy pumpkin plants all over the yard. The kids planted the pumpkin seeds from the previous Halloween’s pumpkin carving. What do you know they grew and grew, but alas no pumpkins. We didn't have any bees to pollinate the flowers and manual pollination wasn't working either. So the lawn mower came out and finished them off.

Once again inspiration struck me, that and www.gardenerschoice.com had some huge tomato plants they were selling at great prices. So here it was a place to raise some "Mators". It has to look nice though.

The previous owners had already put a small raised area lining the back wall of the yard and my wife decided that we should go with the same castle stones they used, naturally I agreed.

Time to plan and gather materials.
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25 comments
May 21, 2011. 4:16 AMElvenChild says:
witch the red pepper and tomato plants the dogs wouldn't dear go back there again
May 25, 2010. 5:10 PMAce Fix it says:
My dog has destroyed everything I've planted over the past 5 years of owning a house.  it has been very frustrating.
Dec 29, 2008. 11:07 AMscafool says:
I read your other instructables on this garden corner and a couple of thoughts came to mind. comment to step 1: Halloween pumpkins are almost all hybrid varieties. They might be able to produce vines but they can't produce seed so you get no pumpkins. comment on tomatoes: High levels of nitrogen push them to produce leaves instead of fruit. Potatoes do the same thing. Fruit likes potash and phospate. (Potatoes are the same way.) Usually excess nitrates wash out with rain or gas off after a year, but high nitrate fertizer is for grasses, like lawns, hay or corn. If it is extremely hot tomatoes sometimes have a problem pollinating themselves too. As you have noted in a comment, tomato pollen changes once the temperature gets to over 90 degrees, and the normal temperature for the flowers to be fertile is between 75 and 85 degrees. If you had high temperatures and more nitrogen than needed you might expect a lot of blossoms to drop instead of setting fruit. Just a couple of thoughts you might like to check out.
Jul 1, 2008. 8:15 PMLucyBelle says:
Mr Rig-it, you don't want to grow peppers with tomatoes. they are not good companion plants. also for a support structure, always use your imagination and whatever you have on hand. experiment !
Apr 18, 2008. 1:17 PMzoe_roses says:
If you have problems with tomatoes not ripening, you might be watering to much. red tomatoes are when the plants go to seed. they only go to seed if the watering is spratic, so water deeply, but less often. this will help the tomatoes to ripen.
Mar 27, 2008. 9:55 PMblizz86 says:
lol yes your tomato stands ARE upside down.. i know that the heat in CA and AR arent really similar but i know its both HOT. but did your tomatoes end up ripening really small (so its like cherry tomatoes) and the random 2-3 regular sized tomatoes?
Mar 28, 2008. 3:39 PMblizz86 says:
hmm lol :D but yeah all mine ripened correctly.. they were really sweet too ! thanks for the reply
Sep 19, 2007. 10:03 AMIbanezfoo says:
Your cages are upside down :)
Mar 27, 2008. 10:39 AMeatsalot says:
it might be easier just to build some little "ladders" out of wood and have them grow up that or you can put 2 2x4's in the ground and run some twine across the 2 and add more string as they get taller
Mar 1, 2008. 8:46 AMGranny_Leah says:
If you want neater plants, buy a bush variety - you had indeterminate ones. They just keep on growing!
You need to fence your puppies out of the garden. Do they have anywhere else to dig?
Jan 16, 2008. 8:41 AMkoiwings says:
I have used cages built from concrete reinforcing mesh for several years and my Dad used them several years before that. They are about 6 ft tall and hold the plants very well, I occasionally have to reroute a branch or use some flexible plastic tape for support. Determinate and Indeterminate Tomato plants will help dictate how tall the plants will grow. HTH
Mar 8, 2008. 9:22 AMwriterlady says:
tomato plants will produce nothing but leaves if you don't prune or pinch them back. you want to force them to produce fruit instead of leaves. Great Instructable, good pictures.
Feb 16, 2008. 6:05 AMikahoshi says:
My grandfather did exactly the same thing! Concrete reinforcing wire about 5 feet tall, 3 feet diameter. Bury the bottom row of reinforcing grid, then you drive 2 (2"x2" 4 foot tall) stakes into the ground at the perimeter of the cage and tie them up nice and tight. The tomato plants can't knock it over no matter how big and cranky they get. I inherited the cages and I stacked two of them the one time I had a mutant radioactive cherry tomato that grew to 9 feet tall. Worked like a charm.
Oct 10, 2007. 7:37 PMquickthinker says:
i think you need to prune them down, or something.

But nonetheless, awesome job with the garden. For the life of me, i dont think i'm capable in plotting anything related to plants and flowers
Sep 21, 2007. 5:40 AMkirnex says:
Great instructable. Your raised bed turned out beautifully, and I love your pictures. I bet your yard looked great this summer.

Just a quick question about the company you bought from (Gardener's Choice). How was their service? Were you happy with your purchase(s), in hindsight? Any info you can offer would be greatly appreciated.

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Author:Mr. Rig It
I like to build, create, and invent new things to use in life. Sometimes I like to share them with others, that's why I joined Instructables. :-)