Dave's Garden - Gardening Community

Beginner Landscaping: Drainage Issue in tiered bed

  Welcome!  
You've found the famous Dave's Garden website! Join this friendly global community that shares tips and ideas for home and gardens, along with seeds and plants!

Check out the DG homepage for a brief overview of what you'll find in this gardening mega-site.

  Login  
If you don't have an account yet, visit the registration page to sign up.

Username:

Password:


Forum: Beginner LandscapingReplies: 5, Views: 75
Print -
AuthorContent
sharonkt
Farmington, MO

March 10, 2008
6:40 PM

Post #4647799

We purchased our home last fall with this tiered bed in place. The top level is at the same level as our blacktop driveway. Last year I planted a few tomatoes in the top bed but the bottom level was too wet and the roots rot or the plants wash away at the first rain. The rainwater runs off the drive way into the top level, drains to the second level and does not drain away. I know in the near future this bed will have to be replaced, but I am not ready to do that just yet. I thinking about putting in some drain pipe along the edge of the drive to divert the rainwater, but have no clue how to create drainage in the second tier. Any Idea?

Thumbnail by sharonkt
Click the image for an enlarged view.

ecrane3
Dublin, CA
(Zone 9a)

March 11, 2008
9:05 PM

Post #4652390

I have to say from looking at your situation there, the problem might really be that you have poor draining soil. Unless someone put a sheet of plastic in between the logs and the soil, I can't think of any reason why water shouldn't be able to drain properly. The gaps between the logs provide places for water to escape if necessary, and it looks like your ground continues to slope down below that 2nd tier, so if your soil is staying wet too long I think you need to replace it with soil that drains better.
sharonkt
Farmington, MO

March 13, 2008
10:17 PM

Post #4660889

I planned on amending the soil and tilling in some sand before planting this year. In other beds I have dug into plastic sheeting 6 to 8 inched under the topsoil. Maybe this is the case here also.Thanks for the input. I will do more research on soil types.
ecrane3
Dublin, CA
(Zone 9a)

March 13, 2008
10:22 PM

Post #4660937

I would not recommend using plastic sheeting under the topsoil, I'm not sure what you were expecting it to do but at best it won't do anything and at worst it can interfere with drainage and prevent beneficial things like microbes, worms, etc from living underneath where the plastic is and make it harder for your plants to get their roots deep into the soil. If you were using it to prevent weeds, putting 6-8 inches of topsoil over top of it will give the weeds that spread by seed plenty of soil to sink their roots in and grow, and for perennial weeds that are underneath where the plastic was trying to come up, I don't think you'll notice a difference between 6-8 inches of topsoil with or without the plastic.
Len123
Adrian, MO
(Zone 6a)

March 13, 2008
10:29 PM

Post #4661017

i'm still wondering how the tomatoes did that were planted in the fall.
gbirds
Madison, NC

March 17, 2008
11:08 PM

Post #4677003

ecrane, I don't think sharonkt is saying that she put the plastic sheeting under the soil, rather that the previous resident put it in the various beds. You just never know what you're gonna find when you move into a new house!

You cannot post until you register, login and subscribe.

Other Beginner Landscaping Threads you might be interested in:

SubjectThread StarterRepliesLast Post
buying bare-root trees & shrubs on-line sarahn 28 Aug 10, 2008 2:18 PM
Welcome to the Beginner Landscaping forum! dave 41 Aug 20, 2008 11:47 PM
Landscape Transformation - join me! LarissaH 7 Mar 4, 2007 6:31 PM
Hello everyone, I'm new , and I need some landscaping help. Mrsfed04 21 Dec 23, 2007 3:42 PM
Encourage growth to Arborvitae carbo3595 12 Sep 11, 2007 3:24 AM


We recommend Firefox
Overwhelmed? There's a lot to see here. Try starting at our homepage.

[ Home | About | Advertise | Mission | Acceptable Use Policy | Tour | Privacy Policy | Contact Us ]

Back to the top

Copyright © 2000-2008 Dave's Garden. All Rights Reserved.

All times are recorded in EDT
 

Gardens.com Pixamo Photo Sharing Bloom.com Landscaping.com

Hope for America