It's February and thanks to our gorgeous California climate gardening season is getting underway. I had plans to get my backyard ready for bare root trees back in December; but between the holidays and not having any time or the money to drop on tons of materials this didn't get going until January through now. I wasn't too sure about how to go about what I wanted to do either; essentially, to build up a retaining wall big enough for dwarf fruit trees along my back wall. After some thought I decided - I REALLY don't want to haul that much dirt to make this idea feasible! It would probably take me a whole year, at the rate I was going. Planters seemed like a much better idea. Just build up enough dirt
around the tree to get the necessary depth...and I could make it all
modular!
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no fancy construction here! |
Modular also seemed like a good idea because I really had no
idea what I was doing. If I messed up, it wouldn't ruin everything.
:) I decided to make the planters open at the bottom and line them with
landscaping fabric so they would drain freely and to construct these as
simply as possible because I'm not so sure about my carpentry skills.
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structure and order starting to appear |
I
went with 4 planks on each side, held together by brackets and nails.
Wood was bought and cut at Home Depot, common redwood. Cost for each
planter is coming to about $60, $40 for the wood and $20 for the
brackets.
Progress! Three planters made and housing a peach, orange (or maybe lemon which is in the foreground), and avocado tree, and loose planks to mark where the rest of the planter boxes will go. Trees will stay in the pots for this year to see how they'll do in the part-sun location. Next year or the year after when they're big enough I'll put them into the planters directly.
The longer planks are only laying out the probably position so far, and are not set in place yet.
Don't quite know what I'll do with the corners of the yard after that! On the right side there's my compost heap (and a big pot of blueberry plants) - and not sure how to make a graceful end to the row I have going on here. Maybe just low beds to complete the retaining wall? I do need a good spot for herbs!
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