How to Fill a Raised Bed (And Save Money) - YouTube

Channel: Gardener Scott

[0]
The raised beds are built and now it's time to fill them.
[3]
But if you're not careful the cost of the soil can far exceed the cost of the bed.
[10]
Join me as I show you how I fill raised beds and save some money in the process.
[30]
Hi, I'm Gardener Scott.
[33]
And this is one of my raised beds that I'm about to start
[36]
gardening in. If I were to go to one of those big box stores and buy bags of garden soil to fill this bed,
[45]
just how much it would cost to fill it? Go ahead and think of a number?
[51]
I can almost guarantee you that number is too low.
[55]
Buying bags to fill this with a name-brand
[60]
product would be close to
[62]
$300 and I don't want to spend anywhere near
[69]
$300 on filling this bed.
[72]
I can do it for 50. I can do it for 40. And if I'm lucky I can do it for
[78]
almost free. And that's what I'm about to show you.
[81]
So you may be thinking that my math is
[85]
completely wrong that there's no way this bed could cost
[89]
$300 to fill.
[92]
Well, let me show you how I arrived at those numbers because I think it's very
[96]
important that you have an idea of how much soil it will take to fill a raised bed that you create.
[103]
This bed is 4 feet by 8 feet long.
[108]
4 by 8 means that this is
[111]
32 square feet.
[115]
Most beds aren't this deep. Mine are this deep because I've got rabbits that I don't want jumping into the bed.
[121]
So let's go with half of this height, which is more typical in home gardens.
[127]
This is a 2 by 10. I'm not going to fill it all the way to the top,
[132]
but let's say you have a bed close to this size and you fill it mostly full with soil to
[139]
a depth of about 9 inches.
[142]
Well, 9 inches is
[144]
3/4 of a foot... 0.75.
[148]
So if we take the 32 square feet and multiply it times the .75 depth,
[156]
we come up with
[158]
24 cubic feet.
[161]
So it will take
[162]
24 cubic feet to fill half of this.
[167]
Those are the numbers that I'll be using. Realize that I'm talking about a double bed.
[172]
So when we get to the end, I'll show you where that 300 really comes from.
[176]
Many gardeners when they fill their raised beds just go to the store and buy a bag of garden soil.
[182]
So that's what I did.
[183]
I went to Lowe's to see what they had to offer for garden soil.
[190]
And I'll be comparing a few bags, but let's start with this bag of
[195]
Miracle-Gro garden soil.
[197]
It's 0.75 cubic feet and it costs 4 dollars and 28 cents.
[206]
Well for that 24 cubic foot space that I need to fill, I would need
[213]
32 bags of that garden soil. You do the math, that adds up to
[219]
one hundred and thirty seven dollars to just fill half of this bed. That's where I came up with that
[227]
$300 because if I were to go with that, just that garden soil alone would cost two hundred and seventy five dollars,
[234]
roughly, to fill this bed. I don't want to spend that much money, but here's another option.
[240]
Let's look at this bag of
[243]
Miracle-Gro garden soil.
[245]
This one is twice the size.
[249]
It's 1.5 cubic feet that sells for
[253]
$7.98.
[256]
Well if I buy this
[258]
option, I'll need 16 bags.
[262]
But it'll still cost about a hundred and twenty-seven dollars to fill just half of this bed.
[270]
That's a little bit more money than I'm really looking to spend.
[274]
You can shop around for better prices because Miracle-Gro is a premium brand.
[279]
Here's a bag of Sta-Green garden soil that sells for a little less than four dollars.
[285]
It is a one cubic foot bag.
[289]
Now, it'll take twenty four of those bags to fill this bed. So that means for
[296]
$100, a little bit less than that, I can fill half of this bed. It still cost me $200 to fill the whole thing.
[304]
That's a lot of money.
[306]
The cheapest option that I found at this Lowe's was for bags of top soil
[313]
which sold for less than $2 per bag.
[316]
So to do this top half, the 24 cubic feet,
[319]
I could use those bags and spend less than 50 dollars. But that raises an interesting question because
[327]
when you look at the bag of topsoil, nowhere on the bag does it say what's in the bag.
[333]
In most places, especially here in Colorado, there are no regulations to define what
[340]
"topsoil" means. So they can put whatever they want in that bag and they don't have to label it.
[346]
At least in all of the other bags they identify what's in the bag.
[352]
So for this Sta-Green or the Miracle-Gro, they'll tell you that their bags contained
[359]
compost and peat and coir and composted forest products.
[364]
All you have to do is look at the back of the bag and you'll know exactly
[368]
what you're getting. I'm a little hesitant to buy a bag that I have no idea what's inside.
[375]
But that is one way to save some money.
[378]
So what do I do when I want to fill my beds? Well, typically I'll use one of three methods.
[386]
And for these beds I'll be using two of those methods. For the bottom half
[392]
I'll use the free method. I'll fill it with soil that costs me nothing.
[398]
Because this deeper section won't have a lot of plants growing in it.
[403]
So why spend hundreds of dollars just to fill that bottom half?
[408]
I'm more concerned with the top half and that top half
[412]
I'll use the second method and save a ton of money as I do it. And for that third
[419]
I'll show you what you can do to save money and get exactly what you want in your raised bed.
[426]
For all of these methods
[428]
there's hard work involved. Unless you hire it out, you're going to have to fill these beds,
[435]
usually with just a shovel. That's what I do.
[439]
Where you place the beds can be important.
[443]
So I suggest if you really want to save money
[448]
dig out the area underneath the bed. If you're going to place it on
[454]
lawn, well, then dig out all that grass.
[457]
If you're going to place it in a bare area,
[460]
then dig out some of that soil before you place the bed where its permanent location is going to be.
[467]
And the very first thing you do after you place it, is level it. Make sure it's level on all four sides.
[475]
Because you really don't want a tippy bed so that when it rains all the soil from the top is going to run down
[482]
to the lower section. Make sure it's level. When it comes time to fill it,
[488]
the depth of your bed does make a difference.
[493]
Now, I'm going to jump to that second method first, the one where you save money, but it's not free.
[499]
For many gardeners that have relatively shallow beds, what I recommend is to
[507]
purchase a soil blend.
[510]
Because I've got a lot of space and a lot of beds that I'll be filling, I actually ordered it in
[517]
bulk, by the dump truck load, and had it delivered.
[523]
When you have it delivered or you buy it yourself in bulk, you can save huge amounts of money.
[531]
So the soil blend that I'm using in most of these beds is
[536]
topsoil, compost and humus, as a blend. And it averages out to
[544]
less than thirty dollars for the amount of soil that it'll take to fill half of this bed.
[552]
Much cheaper than I can get with any of those name-brand bags.
[557]
And even cheaper than that
[560]
mystery topsoil. At least I know what the blend is that I'm getting.
[566]
Even though I can save a lot of money by buying the soil in bulk and know exactly what I'm getting,
[573]
I still don't need to fill this bottom half of a tall bed like this with anything that I purchased.
[579]
I want that free option and the free option is something that you can take to fill your entire bed.
[586]
You may have seen my video on Hugelkultur.
[588]
Which is basically taking logs and branches and covering it with soil and nitrogen materials to create your own
[597]
garden soil. You can do that inside a raised bed.
[601]
And that's what I'm doing in the lower half of this bed.
[605]
I'm taking branches and twigs and small logs.
[612]
I just pull them into place and fill the bottom half with all of these old dried branches.
[621]
The next thing I do is to take all that soil, all the grass, all the weeds,
[626]
whatever it was you dug up, and then cover all of those branches with that old crummy dirt.
[635]
And as it all
[637]
decomposes and works together you're creating a soil that you can grow in.
[643]
And as I'm putting all of that bad dirt on top of all of these branches
[649]
I'm also adding other things like grass clippings.
[654]
I'm just taking the bags of grass that I have and spreading it over the entire mix.
[661]
I'm adding organic material to create my own good
[666]
organic garden soil.
[668]
Add whatever organic material you have available at this point.
[673]
Add the horse manure that you might have access to or maybe the chicken droppings from the coop.
[680]
Bags of leaves, the bags of grass, all of that can go in as you're adding that old grassy weedy soil
[688]
to all of these branches.
[692]
And as it all decomposes and mixes together you'll be left with a wonderful soil for free.
[699]
Remember, I'm just doing this in the bottom half, but you could be doing this in the top half as well.
[705]
Or you could be doing this exclusively
[706]
as the soil that you'll be growing in and it'll cost nothing.
[712]
The third option I mentioned is kind of a mix of the first two.
[718]
If you don't have enough of the free stuff lying around to fill the bed or you don't want to buy
[725]
a blend to fill your bed, well, now you take
[729]
some purchased product to mix in with your native soil, and your leaves, and your grass, and whatever you're using.
[738]
I like peat moss. It's readily available. It's inexpensive.
[742]
It might not be the choice for you in the area you live, but I can get this three
[748]
cubic foot bag for less than four dollars a cubic foot and it goes a long way.
[756]
I like to jump start the process by using compost.
[760]
Now, I don't have enough compost made yet.
[763]
If I had my own I would definitely use it and that adds to that free aspect.
[767]
But I have to spend three or four dollars on a bag and I'll typically only use one bag
[775]
to the bed, as I'm filling it. It adds organic material, it helps get all of the microorganisms
[783]
working to create a good soil and it really makes the whole process
[787]
cheaper in the long run. Because I don't have to fill the bed with these bags,
[793]
I just use it to augment what I already have.
[797]
I'm a big believer in growing plants in soil. And when I talk about soil, I mean the earth.
[805]
Everything that has taken millions of years to
[808]
crumble and break down from the mountains and fill the space where we stand. I'm okay with adding organic
[816]
materials to make the soil better so that the plants will grow better.
[822]
But when you look at the "garden soil" that are in the bags that I showed earlier in the video,
[829]
and you look at the ingredients in that "garden soil", you'll note that there's no actual
[836]
soil in those bags. It's all organic
[840]
material. It's bark and coir and peat and compost.
[845]
So what happens?
[847]
Well, if you have a compost pile, and you may have seen this, you start with a big pile and it can lose
[853]
75 percent of its mass as it decomposes.
[858]
So if you're buying that "garden soil"
[862]
and filling a bed with it,
[863]
it will decompose and it will drop in mass, up to
[869]
75 percent of that mass.
[872]
So let's say that I spent two hundred and seventy five dollars to fill this bed with that
[878]
garden soil. A couple years later
[882]
it's going to have dropped substantially.
[885]
Which means I need to add more of that garden soil just to keep the level where I want it to grow plants.
[894]
Now that's where we're getting well over three hundred
[899]
dollars to fill one of these beds. And it just keeps getting worse. And I might need to start adding some
[906]
minerals to it, some rock dust, because there are no minerals that the plants are going to be able to use within that
[915]
"garden soil", which is really a soil-less mix. So by using
[920]
what I dig up, by you using what you dig up, and then blending it within the beds,
[926]
you're really creating a much better environment for your plants. And in the long run,
[932]
yes, you should be adding organic material regularly.
[936]
But you're not going to have to spend a lot of money on it because you can use your grass and your leaves
[942]
on top as a mulch and just let that break down for free. Now to be fully transparent,
[950]
some of those soil-less garden soils on the back of bag will say
[956]
that if you're planning on using it to a depth usually more than three inches
[962]
they recommend mixing it 50/50 with your own garden soil, the earth.
[969]
That's a great option and that ties in with exactly what I've been talking about.
[975]
But remember a lot of those mixes are really nothing more than a blend of compost and a blend of peat.
[983]
You can do the same thing yourself and save some money by just buying the peat and making your own compost,
[991]
or finding bags that don't really cost that much and doing the same thing.
[996]
Blending it just the same way that these big companies recommend you do it.
[1001]
When is the best time to start filling your beds?
[1005]
Well, I tend to think that late summer and early fall
[1009]
is really a good time to build and fill your raised beds
[1015]
because a lot of this organic material is not going to be available to plant roots right away.
[1021]
It needs to decompose a little bit. So by doing it in the fall you have all winter for
[1029]
the bio system to develop and the decomposition to happen.
[1034]
So in the spring when you start sowing seeds, this soil is nice and juicy and rich and healthy and ready to go.
[1043]
This is the first bed that I filled using the methods that I described.
[1048]
Now, there's one more step to the process, and it can be an important one.
[1053]
Remember the bottom half is all that free
[1056]
blend of soil and grass and branches and this top half is mostly what
[1063]
I purchased, the blend along with some compost that I added. I also added one more thing and that's
[1070]
biochar.
[1072]
I like biochar. And for me it works in beds that are just starting to get established.
[1079]
If you have worm castings now's the time to add worm castings.
[1084]
If you have any of those organic
[1087]
materials that you really like or that you've heard really do a great job to improve the growth of plants,
[1093]
well incorporate it into the soil as part of the process of
[1099]
filling the beds with soil. That way when you put the plants in it's all ready to go.
[1107]
If you have any comments or questions about
[1110]
filling your raised beds and how you can save some money, please
[1114]
just ask below. If you have any comments about this, by all means let me know those as well. I'd like to hear your experiences.
[1122]
If you'd like to see more of these gardening videos,
[1125]
well, then subscribe to the Gardener Scott channel. And be sure to click on the bell and receive notifications when new videos come out.
[1133]
If you like this video, well, you can give me a thumbs up and share it.
[1138]
I'm Gardener Scott.
[1140]
Enjoy gardening.