Diy vegetable gardening


12 DIY Vegetable Garden Ideas

Homegrown Harvest

1/13

Nothing compares to the flavor—or sense of accomplishment—of a meal made with herbs and vegetables that you grew yourself. Whether you have a large backyard, a small patio, or a tiny balcony, you can create a DIY vegetable garden at home. With a little creativity, even the most compact spaces can be used to produce a plentiful harvest if you use them efficiently. Here are some DIY vegetable garden ideas to inspire you.

Related: How to Cultivate the Perfect Soil for Your Vegetable Garden

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Planter Ladder

2/13

A vertical tiered planter is a great way to get a lot of use out of a small space. It also makes for an easy woodworking project for beginners. Cedar is a good choice when building pieces that will remain outdoors because it fares well in a number of different weather conditions and wears beautifully over time.

Etsy

Metal Raised Beds

3/13

Those with a little more backyard space will appreciate this DIY vegetable garden idea (building plans available on Etsy). Raised beds are typically made entirely from wood, but this version uses corrugated galvanized roofing to ensure its longevity even in harsh climates. The decorative corner posts add an element of visual interest. These raised beds can be customized to any size or shape to fit the space you have available.

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Tiered Barrel Planter

4/13

This DIY vegetable garden idea could work well as part of a larger garden or as a standalone piece on a small balcony or patio. It involves repurposing old barrels—or crafting new ones from scratch—and attaching them to hinged wooden posts so the planter can be expanded and contracted to fit into the available space.

Related: 12 Little-Known Tricks to Make This Year's Vegetable Garden a Success

Etsy

Cloth Pocket Hanging Garden

5/13

This vertical garden is made of cloth material and features 12 pockets for planting herbs or vegetables. It can be used either indoors or outdoors and works well even with next to no floor space. This version is made from recycled plastic bottles, making it an eco-friendly choice. While you can purchase this one (available on Amazon), it also makes for an easy DIY project if you’re adept with a sewing machine.

Amazon

Cold Frame Winter Garden

6/13

No matter which hardiness zone you live in, this DIY garden idea can help extend your growing season. Because it’s designed with a double-walled polycarbonate top, it absorbs sunlight and retains heat. It’s a great solution for hardening off seedlings as well as growing winter vegetables or low-growing greens.

Related: The Winter Garden: Hedge Your Bets

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Barrel Pots

7/13

While some DIY vegetable garden ideas require a certain level of skill in terms of woodworking, this one can be purchased ready-made and assembled to your liking (available on Etsy). Take the top off a vintage barrel and fill it with potting soil to create a perfect vessel for growing vegetables. If you don’t have access to a vintage version, barrel-style planters are readily available at nurseries and craft supply stores as well as online at Amazon. 

Etsy

Reclaimed Wood Raised Bed

8/13

This DIY vegetable garden idea uses reclaimed wood to create a rustic raised bed. Raised bed gardens keep weeds away from your veggies and provide optimal drainage. One of the unique aspects of this design (building instructions available on Etsy) is the wide lip around the edge, giving you an extra surface for placing gardening shears, seedlings, or other equipment while you work.

Etsy

Vinyl Raised Bed

9/13

One problem gardeners encounter when using raised bed gardens is that the wood used to build them rots over time. By building with vinyl siding rather than wood, however, you can prevent this problem and ensure your garden box will last for decades. This model (available at The Home Depot) comes ready to assemble, which makes for an easy DIY project.

Related: 8 Top Tips for How to Use Compost

The Home Depot

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Extendable Greenhouse

10/13

Create a miniature ecosystem to keep your plants warm in the spring and fall with an extendable greenhouse cover like this one (available at The Home Depot). The base of this vegetable garden is made from steel framing and PVC (Polyvinyl chloride) material which extends your growing season and helps to start seedlings out when the weather is still chilly. The cover is designed so that it can be zipped together and extended to cover as many garden boxes as you need.

The Home Depot

Waterfall Garden Table

11/13

A waterfall-style garden table is a great way to grow a number of herbs and veggies in a small space. This ready-to-assemble DIY vegetable garden (available at The Home Depot) is made from rot-resistant solid fir wood and features self-wicking liners to regulate moisture. Built-in drip holes help with drainage.

Related: All You Need to Know About Keyhole Gardening

The Home Depot

Octagonal Raised Bed

12/13

Most raised garden beds are designed with a square or rectangular frame, this one has eight sides for an interesting visual effect. Consider using cedar, which is generally acknowledged as the ideal wood for outdoor projects because of its weather resistance. While one of these octagonal frames can be placed directly on the ground, they can also be stacked on top of one another to create a taller raised bed.

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U-Shaped Raised Bed

13/13

If you struggle to reach plants in the middle of traditional rectangular raised beds, a wrap-around U-shaped version might be the perfect solution. The main advantage of a U-shaped garden is that while it provides a large planting area, everything is within easy reach. This DIY vegetable garden kit (available on Etsy), allows you to simply put together the pieces in your own backyard, but the design is also fairly easy to recreate from scratch.

Etsy

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25 Incredible Vegetable Garden Ideas

Growing your own produce at home has seen a surge in popularity in the last decade as it encompasses three huge trends: eating clean, saving money, and knowing exactly where your food comes from.

Whether you’re in love with the premise of homegrown organic vegetables or are simply looking to reduce your shopping bill, this list of 25 vegetable garden ideas will have you reaching for your trowel.

1. Raised Beds

Raised beds are a sleek looking way to have your vegetable garden presented in your backyard. It looks clean and landscaped, while also being functional; you could grow different types of vegetables in each planter. For example, you could plant root vegetables in one planter, lettuces in another, and so on. This method of separating your vegetables in different planters will help you focus different types of plant food on specific types of vegetables to help them get the nutrients they need and improve their growth. The raised beds shown here are bordered with wooden planks, keeping your vegetables to their own area and ensuring your yard remains neat and tidy.

2. Fancy Plant

Vegetable gardens, though beneficial in many ways, are often considered to be quite unattractive and messy, and therefore are generally not present in yards that are immaculately kept. This doesn’t need to be the case, however, as is displayed here in this yard where defined vegetable garden beds sit on a manicured lawn. Providing the vegetable patches are well-maintained, you can still achieve a polished look. Using an edging tool around the vegetable beds will create a defined look, adding to the pristine effect. Grouping similar vegetable types together will also prevent the beds from looking disorderly.

3. Yard Sale Pots

You don’t need a lot of space or money to grow your own vegetables. Pots and planters are ideal vehicles for growing vegetables, and you can use the containers that you probably already have lurking around your garage or garden shed. You could also pick up a selection of various pots at yard sales, as a collection of old mismatched pots filled with growing vegetables will fit with the popular rustic trend. Growing your own food doesn’t need to be expensive; you can have fun sourcing containers from markets or friends and family, and then, find more enjoyment in planting your vegetables and watching them flourish in your inexpensive mismatched pot collection.

4. Divide and Conquer

A large bed with a divider would work well for people who have a small to medium-sized lawn, or for people who want to keep their vegetable garden fairly compact while still growing a variety of vegetables. This is a more easily achievable alternative to having several vegetable beds, which would require more space and more effort to create. The divider is a simple and inexpensive solution for keeping different varieties of vegetables separate. These dividers can be purchased from hardware stores, but could also be easily replicated at home with a few lengths of timber. The planks need to be set out in a grid shape, and could be secured together either with glue, screws, tack nails, or garden string.

5. Hanging Planters

Growing vegetables in hanging planters is an excellent space-saving solution and could be done with just a few planters, or in bulk as seen here. Utilizing hanging planters means you can keep different types of vegetables separate, which can benefit the plants themselves. But it will also make life easier for you if different vegetables require different treatment in terms of the frequency and amount of watering they need.

Planters are best hung from metal frames for strength and stability as they can become quite heavy when filled. The planters themselves could be built from wood, metal, or plastic, depending on the look you are going for and the amount of money you wish to spend.

6. Urban Gardening Box

A vegetable garden in a box is a perfect way for urban city dwellers to grow their own produce. Your container box can be kept on a windowsill, a balcony, a terrace, or small garden, and the size of the box can be specifically chosen to suit your space limitations. Though you may not be able to grow an abundance of vegetables in a container box, a small selection of your favorite vegetables should be easily achievable. With the addition of a couple of grow lights, you can keep your garden growing all year round. You can also rotate your crops to grow different crops one after the other.

7. Planter Party

If you are fortunate to have the space required, you could create your own vegetable garden by grouping together a selection of large planters. These deep planters are perfect for growing root vegetables that require extra space, and the height of them also means you won’t have to spend hours on your knees tending to the needs of your plants. Tall planters such as this would be ideal for anyone with joint issues, as you could happily pull up a chair and enjoy gardening without running into stiff joints or aching muscle issues.

8. Heart-Shaped Box

If you like your gardening endeavors to be more on the unique side, there’s no reason why you can’t get creative with your vegetable garden. This heart-shaped vegetable plot is just one example of how you can customize your garden to reflect your personality. You could buy a shaped container to house your vegetables, or, alternatively, build your own vegetable bed on the soil in your yard to your chosen shape using regular garden tools. Edge the vegetable bed in a miniature fence to enclose the vegetables and maintain the shape.

9. Children’s Veg Garden

Having a vegetable plot in your backyard for your children to tend to has many benefits. Gardening can increase a child’s concentration, help develop an interest in healthy eating, encourage children to spend time outdoors away from their digital devices, build self-confidence, and nurture a love of nature. Gardening is also a perfect way to bond with your children and allow them to reap the rewards of their handiwork. To create a children’s vegetable garden, focus on functionality rather than appearance. Build the garden in a safe place easily accessible for your child, and space out vegetables so that they can maneuver safely between them.

10. Tiered Vegetable Plants

If your backyard is on a slope, then instead of trying to contend with it, make a feature out of it. Create a multi-level vegetable garden by building planters in a step-like method, and make the most of your sloping yard. These tiered planters have been painted to draw extra attention to them. If you plan on painting your planters, be sure to do it before planting your vegetables and choose a hardwearing paint intended for use outside to prevent fading and peeling.

11. Planting Table

Planting tables, though generally quite costly, are an excellent space in which you can grow vegetables without using up valuable floor space. You can purchase planting tables in a variety of sizes to suit the space you have, the only limitation being that they tend to be quite shallow and so are not suitable for growing vegetables which require a lot of growing space beneath the soil. Obviously, they are portable and therefore can be moved into a greenhouse during adverse weather, or can be moved around your yard to a more suitable spot if you find your vegetables are not thriving.

12. Green Roof

Accessible rooftops make excellent spaces for growing plants, herbs, and vegetables. Due to their comparative height with other buildings and trees, they tend not to be in the shadows during any time of the day, and therefore vegetables benefit from maximum levels of sunlight. They also make efficient use of rainwater. Having a vegetable garden on your roof gives you a peaceful and quiet place to relax in the middle of a city, as well as a great view while you’re gardening. Green roofs have many other benefits, including prolonging the lifespan of roofs by protecting their materials from the elements, as well as reducing energy bills as green roofs tend to keep buildings warmer.

Communal vegetable gardens are growing in popularity as a means to enjoy fresh organic produce while also building relationships within the community. The general idea behind community gardens is that a single plot of land, typically owned by local authorities or a non-profit organization, is turned into a communal vegetable garden that can be nurtured by individuals within the community, who then share the produce once it is harvested. These community vegetable gardens are a great way to get to know your neighbors and build positive connections in your neighborhood. They also improve the attractiveness of your local area and encourage community spirit.

14. Industrial Garden

Galvanized containers can be utilized as portable vegetable containers in backyards, on balconies, or on rooftop gardens. They are especially useful for growing vegetables which have deep root systems, due to their depth, along with plants which bear fruits, such as tomato plants, as stakes can easily be placed in them and won’t fall over. Galvanized pots are very sturdy and hardwearing, and therefore are a good investment which can be used year upon year. They have a trendy industrial look about them, which has become increasingly popular in recent years and can be picked up relatively cheaply at hardware stores.

15. Busy Balcony

In lieu of a backyard, you can make use of your balcony as a home for your vegetable garden. You can be selective with your choice of vegetables, choosing to grow only those that take up limited space, or if you’re keen on growing a wide variety of produce, then you can maximize growing platforms by being clever with your space. Balcony planters are available that can be fixed to the railings of a balcony, creating a growing space which didn’t previously exist. You can also create more growing space by placing planters on shelves on your balcony, fixing planters to the walls, or using hanging planters.

16. Green Wall

Wall planters solve the problem of trying to create a vegetable garden in limited space. Wooden or metal planters can simply be hung or screwed onto the wall, providing a place to grow your produce. If positioning several planters on to a wall, be sure to allow enough space above each planter for the vegetables to grow upwards.

17. Vegetable Deck

If your outside space is decked, consider using solid planters to house growing vegetables. Concrete or metal planters can look sleek and elegant on decks, and they do a great job of keeping soil and compost from spilling out onto your deck. Large planters filled with vegetation will also provide some welcome greenery on a decked area.

18. Vertical Gardening

Vertical gardening has really taken off over the last few years, as growing plants and vegetables has become more trendy among younger generations who often live in apartment blocks or have very limited outside space. A vertical garden can be looked upon similarly as the idea behind high rise buildings; when you don’t have the floor space to build outwards, instead build upwards, creating masses of space on a small footprint. A vertical vegetable garden can be achieved by creating vessels on your walls or fences in which you can plant your growing produce.

19. Hanging Baskets

Hanging baskets are synonymous with flowing flowers, but they are actually a great receptacle for growing produce, particularly herbs that don’t require as much growing room as vegetables. You could hang baskets in your backyard or on your balcony, growing herbs to complement the vegetables you have growing elsewhere.

20. Through the Window

This window box is proof that you don’t require any outside space at all to grow your own vegetables. Produce can be grown entirely indoors as long as it is placed in an area with lots of sunlight, such as a windowsill. Green onions are the perfect vegetable to grow in a window box as they need very little space, and a large quantity can be grown in a relatively small container.

21. One-Pot Wonder

If you’re only just embarking on your vegetable growing journey, then you may want to start small rather than going whole hog right from the start. You can grow your own food with just one container pot, and once you become accustomed to the level of care your growing vegetables need, you can choose to branch out with more pots, or just continue with your one pot project. A tomato plant is always a good starter plant, as it grows upwards fairly rapidly, requiring little space to achieve an abundance of the fruit.

22. Grow Bags

If you’re not particularly interested in how your vegetable garden looks, then grow bags are the perfect low-cost medium for growing vegetables at home. They can be washed out and reused after each season, providing a long-term solution for your vegetable growing needs. They are popular among experienced gardeners because they don’t dry out at the bottom like some pots do, retaining more moisture and nutrients for better plant growth.

23. Hydroponic Vegetables

Hydroponic gardening is the art of growing plants without the use of soil or compost. It is taking off in a big way in the vegetable supply industry due to its efficiency, but a DIY hydroponic vegetable garden can be achieved at home with a little bit of research and some basic items that you probably already own.

24. Veg Edge

Create your own vegetable plot in your garden by simply introducing nutrient-dense soil into a specific area and enclosing it with a low-height edging strip. The benefits of this option are that you can completely customize the size and shape of your vegetable garden, and it involves very little time, effort, and money spent before you can jump in and get your hands dirty with planting your veggies.

25. Greenhouses

The humidity in a greenhouse makes for an ideal vegetable growing environment, and you will find that your vegetables thrive more so than if you grow them in an open space. Though greenhouses have taken a dive in popularity, most likely due to their often unattractive appearance, there is no contest when it comes to the best conditions in which to grow plants. If you’re willing to spend a small fortune, there are modern greenhouses on the market to house your vegetable garden and make a trendy statement in your yard at the same time.

Growing your own vegetables is a very rewarding hobby, whichever way you choose to do it.

76 creative gardening ideas for summer residents that are easy to implement

"House" of sunflowers, beautiful plant lighting and other interesting garden ideas

Coronavirus has shown how hard it is to fall out of your usual way of life for a long time. Therefore, people began to look for an outlet in various activities - someone trained hard, someone leaned on books or films, but someone felt a craving for gardening or floriculture.

Those who have their own home, of course, are much more fortunate - if you want to plant beds, if you want to beautify the territory ... But, as they say, there would be a desire. Therefore, even those who live in an apartment have found a way to grow not only flowers, but even vegetables and berries.

Today we at 1Gai.ru have prepared a compilation demonstrating how you can customize your personal space by including simple and at the same time original gardening ideas. We think that some of them can be safely taken into account.

See also

Are the fruits and vegetables we eat today less nutritious and healthy (what science says)

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2. My father’s Japanese Garden

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3. Box for stages for stunt flowers

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Test: Not all fruits are easy to find out from photographs

4. My father’s creation to support the only orange that I managed to grow

Kuynhxchi

5. Flower flower my grandmother's corner

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6. My melons needed support

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The easiest way to water your plants

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How to determine if the plant was edible 9000,0002 9,0002 9,0002 9,0002 9000 9 plants and planted flowers on the sides

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10. Add rain to your garden

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11. It was just an abandoned corner when we moved here 2 years ago

KEARNEYCATION, KEARNEYCATION

12. Raress a house of sunflower 9, in whose shade is it nice to sit

MatzoBallsandandPandandPandandPandandPAns 13. Small garden lighting project

Where_Lions_Roam

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Frozen vegetables - good or bad? What the experts say

14. Beautiful glass greenhouse in the community garden of a North Brooklyn farm

tomfruin,tomfruin

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But now no one is laughing at me anymore

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16. My garage wall when I bought my house in 2016 and now. Work still in progress

donorum88

17. My vertical garden. How do you like the idea?

kiel2155

18. Last spring, I turned our front lawn into a garden. Today we opened a small library of community seeds to encourage neighbors to grow

Mumster

19. I didn't know what to do with myself and decided to start a small garden. I have never done anything like this before

Effulgence_

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22 Plants, which will help protect the garden from pests

20. A year after weed weeds and planted drought -resistant flowers, the yard was completely transformed

TryMyBalut

21.

I grow my melon vertically and the fruit needed a little support so I crochet some tiny hammocks

Anna_Banananana

22. Just set up a flower garden with my mother. She thinks that this is terrible, but I like

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23. Gamaki for melons

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24. A couple of years ago I threw the top of pineapple to the ground to make compost. Here's what came out of it...

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unusual in the usual: 20 photos of plants impressed, as if they were from another world

26. It was and became

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28.

You can make great garden boxes out of a broken fence!

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29. We turned an unused pool into an underground rainwater with a capacity of 80,000 liters with beds for vegetables from above

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30. I ate the Avocado and planted a bone in the ground. Here's what grew out of it 2.5 years later

MorningredTimetravel

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37. The garden I made for my wife during quarantine

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Just put in the water, and it will grow up again

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39. What has changed in one year

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4. harvest

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41.

We decided to try to grow potatoes in ordinary bags

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43. When transporting tall plants, it is convenient to use a ladder

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44. Cacti and succulents can be an excellent decoration of the courtyard

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45. “Got” for the seedlings of their citruscous

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46. Speakers from help.

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Water the bed well first. Then lay the newspapers right on top of the weeds and between the ornamental plants. Dampen newspapers with plenty of water. Then cover the paper with mulch. I mulched my bed with 3 inches (7.5 cm) of crushed leaves. Shredded wood chips also make an excellent mulch. My ornamental plants are delighted with the new weed-free environment. And I'm happy too. Because I won't have to fight weeds in this garden for at least one season. And here is another great advantage of newspaper mulching. As paper decomposes, it (as well as shredded mulch) provides abundant food for beneficial soil organisms. In a year, your land will be crawling with worms and other soil builders.

You may also be wondering if I'm afraid of the chemicals used in newspaper ink. No. From most of the reports I've read, today's newspapers are printed with soy-based inks. Even glossy pages are coated with non-toxic material. I have no doubt that the air we breathe contains far worse chemicals than those found in newsprint.

47. Even on a small balcony you can grow lettuce and other herbs in a flower box

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52. The old golf bag can be adapted for storing garden tools

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5. My grandparents' garden

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55. The case when everything comes in handy in the household, even old pipes!

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Last fall, we sowed fields of wildflowers on our parking strip

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66. Our raised and fully closed garden, built by my incredibly talented husband

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67. The tulips in this garden are planted in the form of tulips

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68. Filling raised beds

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69. The second life of a whiskey barrel

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70. This is that my wife and I built

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71. Prepared and ready for the first year of gardening

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72. Strawberry-spinning towers

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73. My dad turned my grandma's jacuzzi into a small garden

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74.

I'm tired of birds pecking at my sunflowers. But I found that they hate the reflective surfaces

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75. The greenhouse for 2 dollars

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76. Do you know that Ivas branches are very easy to take care? You can make hedges and houses by simply sticking willow branches into the ground!

www.thewillowbank.com

Cover: Matzoballsandchoppedliver / What DIR -Garden Design, Pictures of interesting ideas, Councils and recommendations of design that will stand out from the rest. To do this, borrow some good ideas and improve them by adding a few creative elements. How to create a garden and a garden with your own hands, not like everyone else, interesting ideas - in our article.

Contents

  • DIY garden design
  • Using materials at hand
    • Details in the garden
  • Making a pond in the garden with your own hands
  • elements
  • DIY garden and garden crafts
  • Video: DIY garden and garden crafts from plastic bottles

DIY garden and garden design

Minimalists can get rid of everything superfluous, creating a clean form, leaving only those elements that will be used for their intended purpose. No need to pay attention to the proportions and unity of the overall appearance. If there are decorative details, then they fade into the background. Minimalism is distinguished by the use of only straight lines, most often even plants are given a rectangular shape. To decorate the garden, decorative bridges, green lawns, stone paths, pools or artificial ponds are used.

See also: How to decorate a dacha: original ideas for flowers and crafts

Using materials at hand

To make the yard look natural, reminiscent of a cozy village house, old, obsolete objects can act as decorative elements: barrels, watering cans, clay containers, crockery and wooden crates. In the most picturesque part of the garden, you can build an arch of stones or wood, behind which there will be a gazebo, entwined with vines or bright flower beds. On the upper part, you can place a small elegant pond or fountain, a wooden cart or miniatures from a variety of materials. The main thing is to observe the measure, otherwise your garden will look like a warehouse of old things. In such gardens, preference is given to fruit trees, perennial shrubs and wild flowers.

Details in the garden

In a small area, to make the site look harmonious, you need to work on the details. For such gardens, you can make a lawn that looks like a green carpet, add hand-made crafts that will look harmonious in combination with sand labyrinths, small decorative ponds or fountains.

Do-it-yourself decoration of a reservoir in the garden

To decorate the site, you can use a small artificial reservoir with a wooden bridge enveloping it. This is within the power of every person. As a material for a decorative bridge, metal, wood and concrete are used. For the manufacture of railings, various inserts, carved elements and ropes are used. Over time, the boards will change color, and the bridge will give your garden a complete look. A decorative bridge in combination with an artificial reservoir can serve as a division of your site into two zones with different designs - a garden and a vegetable garden.

Various shapes can be used to create a compact vegetable garden.

Video on how to make a pond in the country with your own hands (step by step)

Decorative elements

You can make a comfortable house for vegetables and herbs from old barrels and tanks (plastic, wooden). They will also serve as an element of decor if you stick appliqués on their outer part or paint them by hand.

Popular vertical vegetable beds in the form of pyramids, rectangles, cones and other geometric shapes. This species is ideal for cultivating vegetables and as mini flower beds. Your home-made works will be able to complement the decorative garden.

Paths made of gravel and sea stones between beds with vegetables and herbs will look elegant.

See also: Ways to deal with ants in the garden or in the garden

Crafts for the garden and garden with your own hands

To decorate the site, it is not necessary to buy expensive decorations, you can make them yourself. Let's look at some unusual ideas.

  1. Mosaic decorated balls. Of these, you can create a separate rock garden and decorate the flower beds. The shape and pattern of the decorative ball is up to you.
  2. A garden scarecrow and a birdhouse for birds will organically fit into the plot. Their shape and appearance will depend on your imagination.
  3. Non-standard solution - a composition of bottles in the form of a tree that can be painted.
  4. Homemade flowers from old lampshades, salad bowls, plates and glasses. Such crafts are considered a real work of art.

    Learn more