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Our Easy DIY Guide to Building a Raised Garden Bed

Use these DIY instructions to make your own planting box for veggies

Johanna Silver

A raised garden bed—essentially a large planting box—is the ultimate problem solver: It offers perfect drainage, protection from pests, and easy access to crops. And it’s just the thing to turn your backyard into the farm of your dreams. Follow our directions, and you’ll be able to build the 4-by-8-foot bed pictured here as a weekend project.

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The perfect raised bed

If you're realizing you were hoping for something simpler, we've got hacks to help you make a raised bed happen more quickly. And if you're looking for a construction challenge, you'll want to read up on how to create a Strawbelisk, which is only the coolest and most impressive-looking planter ever. Design: Sunset garden editors Johanna Silver and Lauren Dunec Hoang

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Materials & tools

Materials
  • Four 16 inch-long 4-by-4s*, to act as corner posts
  • Two 4-foot-long 2-by-12s*, for bed ends
  • Two 8-foot-long 2-by-12s*, for bed sides
  • Twenty-four 3 1/2-inch #14 galvanized or stainless steel screws
  • Twenty-four 1/2-inch #8 galvanized or stainless steel screws; optional
  • Six 12-inch-long pieces of 1/2-inch PVC pipes; optional
  • Three 10-foot-long pieces of 3/8-gauge rebar; optional
  • Three 3- by 5-foot rolls of 1/4-inch-mesh hardware cloth, to deter burrowing animals; optional
  • Twelve 1-inch galvanized tube straps; optional
  • 1 roll bird netting or floating row cover; optional
  • 16 cubic feet of planting soil
  • 16 cubic feet of compost
  • Drip-watering system; optional
Tools
  • Drill
  • 5/32-inch drill bit
  • Pencil
  • Ruler
  • Shovel or trowel
  • Level (optional)
  • Gloves
  • Staple gun
  • Wire cutters
  • 4 adjustable woodworking bar clamps: 2 short (12 inches) and 2 long (6 feet); optional
*A note on the lumber: For our side and end boards, we selected sustainably harvested “construction heart”—or con heart—redwood that we ordered at a lumberyard. Con heart is cut from the center of a log and is the most rot-resistant. We used boards that are 12 inches wide, giving us a full foot for plant roots to thrive. To save time, we asked the lumberyard to cut the wood to the lengths we needed. (You’ll need a skill saw, hand saw, or table saw if you’re making the cuts yourself. Be sure to measure twice and cut once, as pieces of wood often vary slightly in their listed lengths, and you’ll need the sides and ends of your bed to be exact.)
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Frame

You’ll build the bed upside down. Working on a flat surface (such as a patio), set a 4-foot 2-by-12 board on its narrow side edge on the pavement; at one end of the board, place a 16-inch 4-by-4 corner post upright and flush with the end of the board. Use two adjustable woodworking clamps—or a buddy—to keep both pieces of wood flush on the sides and bottom.

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Drill to attach

Before securing the post to the 4-foot board, help prevent the wood from splitting by predrilling three evenly spaced holes in the board with the 5/32-inch drill bit. Then secure the board to the post with three 3 1/2-inch screws. (Once the board is secured to the post, you can remove the woodworking clamps if using.)

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Repeat to complete

Now that you’ve got the previous step’s post-adding technique down, repeat that technique to attach a corner post to the other end of the 4-foot board. Then grab the remaining 4-foot board and attach a corner post to each end. You now have the two 4-foot ends of your raised bed and are ready to attach the bed’s longer sides: Position the first of your 8-foot 2-by-12 side boards between your two 4-foot bed ends. Make sure the 8-foot board is flush with each corner post (hold them steady with the woodworking clamps—or grab that buddy again), then predrill each board end with three holes and secure it to a post with three 3 1/2-inch screws. Repeat to attach the remaining 8-foot side board to the awaiting corner posts. Your rectangular raised bed is now complete!
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Position for sun

With help from a friend, flip the bed right side up and move it into position. If you plan on planting vegetables, choose a spot in your garden that receives full sun—meaning at least 6 hours of sun per day. A north-south orientation of the bed will give you even sun exposure.

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Anchor the bed

Once you’ve decided on a bed location, dig a 5- to 6-inch-deep hole for each of the corner posts. Then sink each post into the ground.

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Level the bed

Make sure the bed is level on all sides (using a level if you have one); this will ensure that irrigation percolates evenly. Then backfill the corner holes with dirt to steady the posts.

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Keep out birds and frost

To give your vegetables an edge on birds and frost, consider adding hoops to hold up bird netting or a floating row cover. If you want to add these three optional hoops, attach their PVC support tubes now (before you fill up the bed with dirt).

Here’s how: On the inside of each of the long (8-foot) sides of the raised bed, evenly space three of your 12-inch pieces of 1/2-inch PVC pipe. Set those pipes upright against the bed sides, making sure that each PVC pipe has a parallel pipe mirroring it across the bed (so each pair can act as support tubes for the hoops).

Secure each PVC pipe upright to the inside of the bed with two tube straps, using two 1/2-inch screws per strap.

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Deter burrowing pests

You don’t want to share your vegetables with gophers and moles. If they’re a problem in your area, keep them out of your raised bed by adding a layer of hardware cloth before you pour in your planting soil.

Here’s what to do: Rake existing soil at the bottom of the bed to level it, then tamp it smooth. Wearing gloves, line the bed bottom with hardware cloth, making sure that the cloth is lying flat on the bottom and curving up to touch each side of the bed. Secure the cloth by stapling it to the sides of the bed. Use wire cutters to trim excess cloth and to help the cloth fit flush around the corner posts.

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Add soil

Fill the bed with a 50/50 mixture of planting soil and compost. (You can buy both in bags at a garden center, and you can typically save money by buying both in bulk at a local soil yard.) Once the bed is filled, rake the soil smooth and moisten it with a gentle spray from the hose.

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Set up irrigation

If you’ve got a drip system, simply connect this bed to your existing irrigation line. To cover our 4- by 8-foot bed evenly, we added 1/4-inch emitter lines (spaced every 12 inches) to 1/2-inch tubing.

More: How to set up your own drip irrigation system

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Plant!

Your bed is ready to get growing with fruits, herbs, and vegetables. Learn where to start with our guide to growing an edible garden.
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Protect your crops

To cover newly planted seedlings with bird netting or a season-extending floating row cover, add hoops to the PVC pipe supports in your bed. To form a hoop: Bend one of the 10-foot pieces of 3/8-gauge rebar so that it arcs into a half-circle, then slip each end of this hoop into a PVC pipe support.

Repeat with remaining rebar to form and secure two more hoops. Then drape the bird netting or row cover over all three hoops.



Sunset’s Own Gardening Tools

Sunset Gardening Apron

Thomas J. Story

We’ve teamed up with the good people at White Bark Workwear in Los Angeles, California, to produce our first official Sunset garden apron—a sustainable and practical tool for gardeners everywhere. The spacious utility pockets are gusseted to expand and provide extra room for tools, twine, garden clippings, and anything else you might need to keep near.

Sunset Garden Apron, $125

Foldable Garden Seat with Tools

Whether you’re growing your own food or seeding flowers to mesmerize the neighbors, gardening is hard on your body. Our foldable garden seat, featuring a neat embroidered Sunset logo, reduces the stress of constant kneeling or squatting. Plus, it comes with comes with five essential tools and the pockets to keep them at hand.

Foldable Garden Seat, $115

Fisher Blacksmithing Garden Cultivator

Rab Cummings

This elegant rake is great for breaking up dirt and attacking weeds! The tines are ideal for working with grasses and other weeds that have shallow, rhizomes, or runner-type growth. The carefully bent side tines flare slightly below the ferrule creating a beautiful, fleur de lis image. The solid steel rivets are set horizontally to the direction of pressure providing additional stability for the rake.

Garden Cultivator, $60

Garden Tote with Tools

If you’ve got a lot of (ahem) ground to cover in your garden, you’ll need something to tote around your tools—like, um, this tool tote! It’s durable, emblazoned with the Sunset logo, and comes with two trowels and a cultivator, not to mention space to carry a whole lot more.

Sunset Garden Tote, $55

Vintage Sunset Cover Personalized Garden Flags

Plant your flag! Our weather-resistant garden flags come custom-printed with your family’s name. Show off your pride in the West—and, ahem, your good taste—with your favorite vintage Sunset covers.

Sunset Garden Flag, $17