To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Staining garden boxes

Varty Yo

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 4, 2016
Messages
97
Location
Sask Canada
So im building a ton of raised cedar garden beds for vegetables and i want to stain them. I ony plan on doing the outside but unsure what needs to be done to the inside. Do i line with poly? Do i just use landscape fabric? I dont want to risk poisoning my vegetables haha or my family. Am i over thinking this a bit? I have some stain left over from my cedar fence i plan on using.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

bdbecker

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Nov 18, 2015
Messages
5,550
Location
Iowa
You're over thinking it. Stain the outside, fill the inside with dirt and plant.

Agreed... I did this on some planter boxes I made out of douglas fir 2x lumber 5 years ago and they've held up fairly well - cedar should hold up even better.

For the record, I knew douglas fir would eventually rot and need to be rebuilt. I was hoping they'd last 5-7 years and it looks like they should make it through another season or two.
 

ripperd

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 2, 2014
Messages
2,044
Location
Twin Cities, MN
I made mine out of cheap pine. I lined the inside (but not the bottom) with plastic to prevent the pine from rotting. With cedar this would be unnecessary, it is naturally more resistant to rot.
 
Last edited:

Dibiase77

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 12, 2019
Messages
179
Location
Laundry room converted into a workspace.
When I was 15-16 I made my mom a cedar planter for mother's day. I'm 30 now and I just helped her plant her flowers in it on Monday. No stain or poly. It's still going strong. No rotting or cracking. She just empties and covers with tarp every winter.

Sent from my Alcatel_5044R using Tapatalk
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

XRlifer

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 5, 2016
Messages
62
Location
Salem Oregon
I built 4 of them last year. Picked up cedar bed 'kits' from ACE. I added doug fir 4x4 for the corners to get it belt high. Bought some 1x6 cedar boards to make the bottom with a vertical 2x4 for support. I also lined the bottom and sides with some left over landscaping fabric. They worked great last year, and already growing our veggies this year.
P.S. I consider myself lucky, the Mrs said I could build my shop if I would build her a few raised garden beds.......pretty good trade-off I think!
 

Jazz1

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 3, 2016
Messages
4,184
Location
Thunder Bay On.
I built my raised beds with treated lumber. Available in a few shades of brown
I’ll stain posts eventually, they were old fence posts I been hoarding
Posts are tall I case of a frost we can tarp the garden
 

Attachments

  • 5C2B44C0-7A11-448A-B641-49AEC3B45C32.jpg
    5C2B44C0-7A11-448A-B641-49AEC3B45C32.jpg
    148 KB · Views: 40

bdbecker

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Nov 18, 2015
Messages
5,550
Location
Iowa
Is that a flower garden Jazz? If not, aren't you worried about chemicals from the PT leaching into your food?
 

old_smokey

Well-known member
Joined
May 16, 2018
Messages
410
Location
Manitoba
I've got four built with PT lumber in my yard. The chemicals in the wood don't have arsenic anymore (I think they stopped in 2003). I've found a few studies that detail what chemicals leach out and for how long, and which can actually be absorbed by plants and end up in your stomach. Long and short of it is, I'm not concerned. I did line half my boxes with HDPE dimple board, and the other half with vapor barrier, only because I had extra cut-offs laying around and I figured it would help prevent wet dirt from leaching out through the wood seems.

Test fitting:
c33aff554826085d288db94ee52afdfc.jpg

And planted this past weekend.
66a2c4093d3b2bf74b7e62ddf1c2953e.jpg
 

Attachments

  • c33aff554826085d288db94ee52afdfc.jpg
    c33aff554826085d288db94ee52afdfc.jpg
    970.8 KB · Views: 0
  • 66a2c4093d3b2bf74b7e62ddf1c2953e.jpg
    66a2c4093d3b2bf74b7e62ddf1c2953e.jpg
    787.1 KB · Views: 0
Last edited:
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom