Water Collection

Water jugs in a shed

Water Collection

By Zach

 

water jugs in shed with seedlings

I’d like to be able to water my garden with rainwater as much as possible. I have long term plans for this, but in the meantime I want something that will be good enough. I used an old dryer exhaust a neighbor was throwing out to connect the downspout of the short gutter on the shed beside our garden to a cooler with a drain spout raised up on some bricks I hauled in the basket of my ebike from a different neighbor’s trash pile.

I did this all right before a storm following three of the most pollen heavy days I’ve seen in Columbia in several years, so I ended up with a good bit of pollen in the water. This could be a big problem if I was running a large system, but I think I’ll be fine with the small capacity and rapid turnover over the water in it.

water collection tube

By elevating it on the bricks I was able to fit old milk jugs that I had washed out and saved to collect some of the water. I’m storing this in my shed, and will probably move it to a darker place, as sunlight can promote algae growth fairly quickly.

 

Water collection cooler
collecting rain water in a jug
rain water jugs in shed

Building a Raised Garden Bed

Making a Raised Garden Bed From Discarded Pallets
The First Attempt

If Pinterest has done anything for us, it has brought awareness as to how useful those leftover wooden pallets can be. From fences, to beds to houses to raised garden beds, these discarded pieces of wood have been used to build some pretty creative things at a fraction of the price it would otherwise cost. To look at the beautiful Pinterest pictures, one might be inspired to build one’s own pallet project. One might even be fooled into thinking that said project will be incredibly easy. It’s just building something out of scraps, right? How hard can it be?

It depends. This foray into raised bed building is definitely on the rudimentary level, but I say that anything involving some measuring and the use of power tools isn’t really easy. Caroline first cut down a couple of pallets and made wood planks that were roughly the same size. She placed smaller planks vertically across a longer horizontal plank to hold everything together for each wall, two long walls and two short walls. The long walls consisted of ten vertical planks, while the short walls consisted of five. The corners were held together by square rods.

At the beginning of this project, we were moving along quickly by nailing the planks together for each wall with a hydraulic nail gun. Unfortunately, we broke that and had to switch to the drill where we finished the project by drilling screws into the planks. It’s not as “pretty,” the process was a little slower, and we risked splitting the wood more, but it worked. The whole point with this is to use what you have. If one thing doesn’t work, move on to something else! More people are likely to have a drill and screws available to them than a nail gun.

After assembling the walls of the garden bed, we moved it to the yard where we planned to plant and attached the walls together by screwing the corner pieces together. Then it was finished! Caroline planned to rub it with linseed oil later to naturally preserve it a bit better, but a raised bed like this isn’t meant to last forever. We just need it to hold soil for a bit. Eventually, the wood will return to the earth from whence it came, completing the circle of life.

Hopefully this will get your brain juices flowing to make a project of your own out of discarded materials.