Rate my raised bed /diy/. First time gardening that not 1 tomato in a pot. Have cherry tomatoes, full size tomatoes, bell, jalapeƱo, and seranno peppers, onion sets, and eggplant. Bush beans in the back in some tilled earth but I'm iffy on them. Any input is appreciated.
Bunny guard here, will her smell keep them away? Granted this pic was before fencing. Mostly to keep her out.
>>993199
Just eat the rabbits too.
>>993222
I'm thinking about it, a 22 short in the middle of the night. I doubt they'd wake up. Share it with a heeler pup.
Hope you picked a rot-resistant wood
Don't forget to put poles or spirals in the ground to support your tomato plants
>>993198
fucking sexy, how deep did you work the soil?
>>993198
Would plant/10
Come over to: >>>/out/762858 and join the rest of us.
Remember it will be a pain to reach over the fence, so take it down when working the garden.
>>993199
>will her smell keep them away?
Not at all. I've seen bunnies 2 feet from lazy dogs in a live and let live relationship apparently. It will depend on your dog's demeanor and access to the yard in the evenings through the night to morning. Oh and get those tomato stakes in now before the roots go very far.
9/10
i've build a small one for some bhut jolokias.
Nice build, /out/ will be better for discussing the actual gardening aspect though.
trips has spoken... eat the rabbits too.
>>993249
Non rot resistant wood will still easily last 2 seasons, sometimes they'll last 5 or more.
That looks like fir 2x8s, probably $25 worth of materials, if even. Not much to replace.
>>993198
could have made the corner posts 2 feet high and had a proper looking fence
rabbits will jump right over that mess you have
posting mine as well. built from ancient scrap lumber
>>994103
>ancient scrap lumber
Probably for the best. Trees these days don't kno whow to make good wood anymore.
The first thing you will realize in a couple months is how important spacing is. Overcrowding leads invariably to disease and pests. You can follow guidelines online for spacing, but they're usually wrong. Well, that or things just grow twice as big here in texas.