
Core Raised Garden Beds

Most raised beds lose water straight down through the soil. Roots chase it, the surface dries out, and by midsummer you are watering every single day just to keep up.
A core garden buries a sponge down the center of the bed. A trench eight to ten inches deep runs the full length, filled with four to five inches of straw or dried leaves. When you soak that core, it absorbs water the way a sponge absorbs from a bowl — then releases it laterally through the soil, reaching roots up to two feet on either side. Instead of water draining straight past the root zone, it sits in the middle of the bed and feeds outward all week.
The method originated in arid regions where rainfall was scarce and every drop had to count. Gardeners dug trenches, packed them with dried grass, and covered them with soil. The buried organic layer held enough moisture to grow food through dry stretches without daily irrigation. The same principle works in any raised bed — and unlike a wicking bed, there is no liner, no plumbing, and no reservoir to build. You dig a trench, fill it, cover it, charge it with water, and plant the same day.
How to build a core garden bed:
1. Lay cardboard on the grass inside your raised bed frame to smother weeds and attract earthworms as it decomposes. Add a few inches of soil over the cardboard to create a base layer
2. Dig a trench eight to ten inches deep running horizontally down the center of the bed. Keep the excavated soil nearby — you will use it to cover the core
3. Fill the trench with four to five inches of partially broken-down straw, dried leaves, or shredded grass clippings. Straw works best because hay carries grass seeds that will sprout in your bed. Do not overfill — too thick a core will not decompose by next season
4. Cover the core completely with quality topsoil or compost so no straw is exposed. The surface should look like any normal raised bed — the sponge is invisible underneath
5. Charge the core by flooding the bed with a deep, slow watering until the soil is saturated down to the straw layer. This is the step that activates the system — a dry core does nothing. After charging, plant immediately and mulch the surface.
The straw breaks down over one season, loosening soil structure and adding organic matter as it goes. Each spring, dig a new trench and lay a fresh core. The bed gets lighter, drains better, and holds more moisture every year — all from burying material most people rake to the curb.
A trench, some straw, and one deep watering — the bed holds moisture the way soil alone never could.
Reducing Transplant Trauma
Transitioning slowly from seedling tray to garden bed.

Those seedlings you grew under lights look perfect on the windowsill. Put them straight into the garden and they’ll stall — pale leaves, wilting stems, weeks of recovery before they grow again.
The bridge between indoors and outdoors takes about a week. Here’s the short version.
The schedule:
– Days one and two — set the tray outside in full shade for an hour or two, then bring them back in. The wind alone starts thickening the stems. Indoor seedlings have never felt moving air, and the stems respond by building structural cells they didn’t need before
– Day three — move to dappled light under a tree canopy for a few hours. The leaves start developing a protective waxy layer they couldn’t build under grow lights, which put out almost no UV
– Day four — gentle morning sun only, a few hours. Move to shade before afternoon intensity. Morning light is significantly softer than afternoon light and gives the leaves time to adjust
– Day five — full sun for most of the day. By now the seedlings look visibly different from where they started — shorter, stockier, darker green, thicker stems
– Day six — leave the tray outside from sunrise to sunset. Bring inside at night
– Day seven — first overnight outdoors. The cool night temperature triggers a final toughening response in the cell walls
Day eight — transplant into the garden. Water deeply. Mulch around the stem.
The seedlings that went through this week hit the ground growing. The ones that skip it spend three weeks catching up. A week of patience on the porch saves a month in the bed.
That’s the whole schedule. Shade to sun. Gradual. One week
Succession Planting

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Detoxing Foods: Citrus Pectin, Seaweeds (Wakame), Chlorella, Bone Broth or Red Cabbage Juice (L-Glutamine), Tart Cherries (Polyphenols), Green PlaintainsInulin, Raw Garlic.
Cross check that list against the ingredients in my Greens Plus: https://www.healthelicious.com.au/Nutri-Blast-Greens-Plus.html.
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Maximise Your Harvest Yield

Wrong exposure, halved harvest. Most gardeners plant wherever there is space — not wherever there is the right light — and then blame the compost.
Every crop has a precise light requirement. Too much sun scorches delicate leaves. Too little and fruit never ripens.
2 to 3 hours of sun is enough for lettuce, spinach, lamb’s lettuce, and parsley. The shade actually protects them from bolting in warm weather.
4 to 5 hours suits chard, brassicas, peas, and leafy herbs. These grow well with morning sun and afternoon shade — the classic pole-facing or partially shaded bed is often better for these crops than a full equator-facing position.
6 to 8 hours unlocks tomatoes, peppers, and courgettes. Without full sun, British-grown tomatoes stay green and flavourless, and peppers remain thin-walled. An equator-facing raised bed or a warm sheltered wall is essential for these crops in most of the UK.
8+ hours of direct sun is the requirement for pumpkins and squash, Mediterranean herbs such as rosemary, thyme, and sage, and sweet corn. These are the plants that genuinely need the most open, unshaded, sun-facing position available. Rosemary especially thrives in a hot dry sun-facing spot and resents shade.
Map the sun hours on your bed before deciding what to plant in it.
