Thursday, July 9, 2009

Removing Vines From Garden Beds

Well, I started pulling vines on out of another garden bed today. I loosened the soil around the roots to get out as much vine roots as possible.

Even with a leverage fork, it wasn't easy. That a great tool. BTW. The whole thing is solid metal and the bar behind it provides great leverage. It works great. You stab it into the soil then pull back.






When I came across a poison ivy plant in the bed, I stopped and went inside to wash my hands and arms and douse them with rubbing alcohol. I used to be immune to it. Several years ago, I developed a terrible case of it that lasted 2 weeks. I won't risk that again!



But I did dig up a real pile of vines as deep as I could get at the roots.



I'll dig up the poison ivy plants and deep as I can dig, and wearing rubber gloves for protection. I'll have a bucket of soapy water to put them into before I so much as touch a door to the house.

I'm getting there...

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I have a suggestion about your beds.

I noticed the ends are butted one to another, then you brace them.

If you alternate them like a log cabin, then attach them, the external bracing would be eliminated, making it look neater.

Also, if you use landscaping timers, or are good with a drill with 2 by's, you can try this.

drill a hole down the corner, a half inch. ALL the way thru. Hammer a half inch piece of rebar thru the hole and into the ground.

It is amazing how strong that joint will be now.

da bear

Cavebear said...

Da Bear - You are quite right about the weak construction of that bed.

That was one of the first 2 beds I built almost 20 years ago, when I was big into "Square Foot Gardening".

I felt I could give up 3" of length rather than 3" width at the time. And I did do the overlapping on the 3'x3' box next to it.

I have been planning to rebuild the framed beds for a couple of years now (especially the trellis bed which is falling outwards in spite on braces). I will probably use the overlap and rebar construction idea then.

Thanks for the great suggestions!

I used the overlap method on the right front landsape box I built a few years later. It is very solid.

You might have noticed that I did not on the new left front landscape box. I was forced by dimensions. The area was 12'x8' plus a couple of inches. Butt-joints were the only way to reduce the gap at the house and step ends to the minimum.

Well, I had to make the outside corners meet. But even then, I could have simply bought longer boards and cut them to exact length for an overlap. I did it "cheap". That's not the way to go...

At least I put the braces on the INSIDE this time. ;)

Cavebear

Alastriona, The Cats and Dogs said...

That tool looks really handy, I'll have to check into getting one.

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