Making a Garden Bed in the High Desert

 by spike3579
Contest WinnerFeatured
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Growing vegetables is a big part of our spring and summer around here.  We like to grow our own food as much as we can.  Once you start you get spoiled.  The produce in the grocery store, while it looks good, pales in comparison when it comes to flavor and freshness.   We just had green beans last night from the store.  They looked great.  The taste?....Meh.....

Don't get me started on Whole Foods Paycheck either.  You don't really save money gardening unless you happen to shop there.  I don't know why they have all those buttons on their cash registers since it seems that they simply take the number of items you picked out and multiply it by $20.

Back to gardening...

Growing veggies is great but your results are going to be in direct relationship to the quality of your dirt.  Great dirt = healthy plants = awesome vegetables.


 
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Step 1: What is Great Dirt?

Build Bed14.jpg
From a plant's point of view great dirt is soil that is composed of neither too much clay (doesn't drain) nor too much sand (drains too fast) and chock full of decomposed organic matter.  Plants need the soil to be light and fluffy so that they can grow their roots easily.  Fluffy soil also means it's well aerated which the plants appreciate since they need air underground too to do their growing magic.

How does the soil in New Mexico look from a plant's point of view?  Not so good.  If NM dirt was being tested for the above requirements we'd have to pick...D-none of the above.  Our soil tends to be either just clay or just sand and since our climate is arid enough to keep all but the scrappiest of plants from thriving we don't have much of a natural cycle of organic material building up.
pcelica07 says: Jan 18, 2013. 12:03 AM
Bravo!Great job!Thanks for sharing!
calskin says: Jun 8, 2012. 12:15 PM
Congrats! This totally deserves to win!

There's a great video called Greening the desert on youtube that I think you would find really interesting.
spike3579 (author) in reply to calskinJun 8, 2012. 3:53 PM
I just found the one by Geoff Lawton a couple weeks ago. Totally inspiring. Now I'm starting to reconsider the backyard in terms of permaculture principles. I definitely could do a lot more in terms of water retainment and food bearing perennials.
calskin in reply to spike3579Jun 11, 2012. 3:11 PM
That's awesome! I would love to see what you end up doing with it. Swales have facinated me ever since I saw that video and Geoff is pretty much the king of swales and ponds and resevoirs. There's another video I think called harvesting water the permaculture way where he digs a pond. There's way more to that than I thought.
solmstea says: Jun 7, 2012. 10:39 PM
Nicely done! I envy all that space. But then, I made a semi-raised bed in. My front yard and nearly killed myself just digging down 9 inches (why are pick axes so short? That cannot be good for your back...). Don't know if I could have done such a big plot even if I had the room.
spike3579 (author) in reply to solmsteaJun 8, 2012. 5:25 AM
The nice thing about garden bed building is that once you've done it it's there forever. Do one this year, one next year, one the year after that and before you know it you have a lot of garden space.

I'm not always so patient so I'm thinking of starting exercise classes in my yard. For a reasonable monthly subscription you get to come and dig in my yard. Pick axe included!
solmstea in reply to spike3579Jun 8, 2012. 7:17 AM
Yeah, I tried the "good exercise" line on my boyfriend, but he didn't bite.
Shirley_EdenMaker says: Jun 7, 2012. 5:05 PM
Fantastic information! Congratulations on winning the garden challenge.
Shirley Bovshow
spike3579 (author) in reply to Shirley_EdenMakerJun 7, 2012. 7:21 PM
Thanks!!
Sooner Aviator says: Apr 20, 2012. 4:53 AM
Awesome! Since you're willing to do all that work, add one extra step that will pay off in spades! Add a bunch of whatever half rotten wood/brush you have laying around to the bottom of the beds and turn them into Hugelkultur beds.



http://www.richsoil.com/hugelkultur/
spike3579 (author) in reply to Sooner AviatorApr 20, 2012. 5:50 AM
That....is.....amazing!
I have several massive wood/brush piles that I have been procrastinating on dealing with. I could easily (with a ton of labor) double triple quadruple my garden size.
Once I finish terracing the back yard and stacking rock I'm starting a hugelkultur campaign!
Thanks for the tip.  I hadn't heard of it.
Has anyone out there tried this?
what were your results?
Sooner Aviator in reply to spike3579Apr 22, 2012. 10:16 AM
This come from the Permaculture community. There is a wonderful forum that covers all areas of permaculture at...



http://www.permies.com

spike3579 (author) in reply to Sooner AviatorApr 23, 2012. 12:54 PM
I ended up doing a post on hugelkultur....

Look what you started :)
diy_bloke in reply to spike3579May 14, 2012. 10:46 AM
read yr hugelkultur post. You really don't do half work do you? Haven't seen the finished heap yet but it seems to have one heck of a big base
spike3579 (author) in reply to Sooner AviatorApr 23, 2012. 11:36 AM
Great forum.
Thanks for the resource!!
Sooner Aviator in reply to spike3579Apr 23, 2012. 3:47 PM
Glad you like it, thanks for the mention in your blog.
nerdmom920 says: Apr 20, 2012. 5:19 AM
Nice instructable. Pretty much the way I start my beds in Missouri, but I don't have to do as much protection. Of course, there are lots of things to distract critters in my area.
breumer says: Apr 19, 2012. 3:33 PM
We are planning to make our own earthship!
spike3579 (author) in reply to breumerApr 19, 2012. 7:09 PM
Now that's a lot of work!
I live about 1.5 hours from Taos- Earthship central.
Good luck on a mighty project!
breumer says: Apr 19, 2012. 2:45 PM
That's a lot of work! But you can eat your own vetgebles .And it is fun to do! before I start cooking ,I ask our daughters ,to do some shopping in the greenhouses ,It's free and without poison and all that stuff. And its taste much better!
spike3579 (author) in reply to breumerApr 19, 2012. 3:19 PM
I want a greenhouse bad. I've been building one slowly over the past 3 years.
breumer in reply to spike3579Apr 19, 2012. 3:29 PM
respect! build your own greenhouses is quite something!
FireCGun says: Apr 19, 2012. 11:16 AM
i like your idea.
what desert is it?
spike3579 (author) in reply to FireCGunApr 19, 2012. 12:17 PM
It's outside of Santa Fe NM. Technically with 13" of annual precipitation I think we're considered semi-arid but we call it the high desert.
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