Raised-Bed Gardening.
Gardening in raised beds instead of conventional rows is becoming more and morepopular. It’s easy to see why.Raised beds offer earlier crops in the spring, later crops in the fall and better rootcrops. They require less fertilizer and no costly machinery. They have better drainage,fewer weeds and almost no soil problems and yield more produce in less space.Gardeners who have tried raised beds discover that the soil is loose, allowing air,moisture, warmth, nutrients and roots to penetrate more easily. Raised-bed gardening helpscorrect the problems of poor, rocky or compacted soil and extends short growing seasons.There is no best time of the year to make raised beds. Here are three possibilities.Winter. Gardeners have the most time on their hands. This is the mostpopular time for creating beds because it enables the gardener to plant extra early in thespring.Get the frame made up and mix the soil. However, make sure you dig into the existingsoil before putting the mix into the bed. This is called “interfacing” and isvital for plant growth. If you don’t dig before mixing, the plant roots will hit the hardarea and won’t penetrate for maximum root growth and uptake of nutrients and water.With raised beds, too, you can cover that small area with plastic and not worry aboutwet soil and late planting. Raised beds drain well. They get more sunlight from both thetop and sides, too, so they warm up quicker in the spring.Spring. If you can work the soil in early spring, raised beds allowyou to plant earlier and to protect plants against too much rain, lengthy wet spells andother bad weather.Summer or Fall. Planting in raised beds helps fall crops producelonger. Remember, working in the late fall is much cooler and easier than trying to put ina raised bed in the summer.