kitchen garden basics
Published February 17, 2020 by Nicole Burke

Why We Heart Raised Gardens

Filed Under:
beginner garden
garden planning
garden design
What's all the rage about raised gardens?

5 Reasons to Start Growing in a Raised Garden

There's good reason to use a raised garden when growing herbs, vegetable, and some fruiting plants and Gardenary loves raised gardens. Read on to learn why.

Raised gardens are all the rage for vegetable garden designs, but are they really that great or even necessary?

I definitely think so.

In fact, I'm so convinced in how raised gardens ensure your vegetable garden success that my company, Rooted Garden, works exclusively with raised gardens in all our kitchen garden designs.

In this post, you'll discover five reasons why I'm so committed to gardening with raised gardens and why you'll find more success as both a beginner gardener and an experienced gardener when you set up your garden with raised gardens.

five reasons to garden in raised beds Nicole Burke, author of Kitchen Garden Revival, with cedar garden raised beds
Why it's best to set up a vegetable garden with raised gardens -stained cedar garden designed by Rooted Garden in Houston, TX

Reason One: Gardening in Raised Beds Is Simple

Raised garden beds make gardening so much simpler. The elevated garden setup allows you to start your soil completely from scratch (which means you can make it awesome) and also makes tending the garden much more enjoyable.

When you say 'hello' to a raised garden, you say 'bye bye' to bending over, kneeling in dirt, and stepping across rows of mud.

The key to success with your vegetable garden is you being in your garden as often as possible. But you'll be much less likely to head out to the garden when it's muddy, difficult to access, or just uncomfortable to tend.

A raised bed fixes those challenges and makes tending your garden easier, more comfortable, and more inviting, which means you'll be more likely to head out to the garden more often... the one thing that needs to happen for your vegetable garden success.

Why it's best to set up a vegetable garden with raised gardens -stained cedar garden designed by Rooted Garden in Houston, TX

Reason Two: Raised Garden Beds Are Deep

So deep! When planting vegetable, herb, and fruit plants directly in ground, plant roots and vines spread out wide, which means you'll have to give your plants more space.

But in a raised garden, the roots can grow down, way down, and this means you can plant more in a smaller space. I call this 'intensive planting.' (It's intense!) And it's the best when you're trying to grow a lot in a small space, which most of us are aiming to do.

Cedar raised gardens are deep and allow you to grow a lot in a small space

Reason Three: Vegetable Plants Don't Like Bathtubs

People like bathtubs (at least some people do) but vegetable and herb plants just don't.

Most kitchen garden plants need regular water, but they poop out at the party when their roots sit around in water too long. Though your yard may not look like a bathtub, it just might feel like it to your vegetable plants, especially if your yard contains a lot of clay. The wet soil slowly drowns more fragile vegetable and herb plant roots, and over time, you'll see a big difference in the performance of your vegetable garden plants as their growth and production will slow.

Enter raised beds. Raised gardens are set up to drain quickly, which means your plants get all the water they need without having to get soaked.

This also means your plants are much less likely to rot and die. And we like it when our plants don't die.

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Raised garden designs with cedar created by Nicole Burke of Gardenary

Reason Four: Raised Gardens Means Less Weeding

I don't know about you, but I like to be pulling carrots and kale out of my gardens, not weeds.

While raised gardens don't get rid of weeds forever, raised beds definitely make the weed situation minimal. If you take time to set up your raised bed right, you should have little to no weeds coming up from under the bed and just a few airborne weeds to contend with every now and again. And this means more time and space for the things we really want to grow: vegetables, herbs, and fruit.

If you love pulling weeds and not yummy things to eat, then go ahead with your in-ground garden, but I'll be over here picking kale and carrots out of my raised garden bed.

Raised gardens prevent most weeds from growing in a vegetable garden

Reason Five: Raised Gardens Are Beautiful

It's true: plants are pretty all by themselves. But, kitchen garden plants are also pretty dynamic, meaning they change a lot.

One day, your plants begin as just a tiny seed, and the next day, there are suddenly huge vines, and the next, they're just dried-up twigs.

Truthfully, it doesn't happen quite that fast, but it does happen quickly.

On the days when the plants are tiny or dead, the raised garden is there to look pretty on its own even if nothing's growing.

And there's something to be said for pretty little things looking good even when other things might not.

So, as our vegetable garden plants rise and fall, our pretty little raised gardens just stand there, being their pretty little selves and making us feel pretty good too.

raised garden beds look beautiful even in winter
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