Pine Sleeper Garden Bed

Pine Sleeper Garden Bed. 200 x 75mm 2.4m Treated Pine Sleeper CCA H4 Bunnings Australia There are a lot of advantages to having a raised garden bed to grow your fruit and vegetables This article provides a step-by-step guide on how to build a simple raised garden bed using treated pine sleepers

Ross
Ross's raised vegetable beds with new pine railway sleepers Building a raised garden from www.pinterest.com

The project I built this raised garden bed using treated Pine sleepers and the Whites Retain-iT range for the posts To build a raised garden bed you'll need timber suitable for in-ground use, which is typically H4 treated Pine

Ross's raised vegetable beds with new pine railway sleepers Building a raised garden

The project I built this raised garden bed using treated Pine sleepers and the Whites Retain-iT range for the posts Redgum is a hardwood and has a range of durable qualities, but the downside is that it will cost significantly more Traditional CCA treated Pine contains arsenic and so isn't suitable for growing food in unless you line it with builder's plastic

Raised Sleeper Garden beds (Reclaimed Cypress Pine) Dan the Veggie Bin Man. To build a raised garden bed you'll need timber suitable for in-ground use, which is typically H4 treated Pine These include less weeds, more growing space, less soil erosion, better water retention than sandy soils, and better drainage than clay soils

Raised bed from new pine railway sleepers. There are a lot of advantages to having a raised garden bed to grow your fruit and vegetables The completed garden bed! Notes on building a raised garden bed In order to build a stronger, and longer lasting raised garden bed, you could substitute the treated pine sleepers with an alternative such as redgum