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MiHale

(13,251 posts)
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 08:04 AM 2 hrs ago

Straw bales through the years...

We have been using straw bales as raised beds for a few years now. With some forethought you can use them over and over. We have had success and failures along with some…Wow, that was not a good idea…but overall it’s been great.

Over the last 3 years these 4 bales have hosted tomatoes, radishes, zucchini, hot peppers, now they will be in their last year. They are hosting our sweet potatoes which when harvested will destroy the bales. They will go into compost.





These bales are going on to their 4th year, last couple they have played host to green beans the yield has been great so right back at it.



Those bales are a little shorter than our raised beds, which are loaded with onions this year, by probably about a foot still making them rather easy to harvest from.



By far the oldest bales in the garden. These are some of the first bales used about 6 years ago, I think. They were going into compost but looked attractive enough to try something. This year host to beets.



Starting fresh…we’re trying using the bales in the greenhouse. In this semi-controlled environment the ‘conditioning’ phase was a breeze.
Trying carrots a habanero pepper and a Turkish cherry tomato plant. The carrots hopefully will be a winter crop also.





It’s still a little early things haven’t had the time to fully grow out but it looks like a promising year overall in the garden. We have Kazakh Melons coming up, the strawberries look prolific. Of course the tomatoes are starting to flower with some even putting out fruit. Still have some of last year’s harvest in storage so this could be the year to really stock up.

Put on your gardening gloves and a big smile…forget about insanity for a little and go grow something.
Contact with the soil is good for the soul…ok…maybe forget the gloves.















15 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Straw bales through the years... (Original Post) MiHale 2 hrs ago OP
I hope you have a plentiful bounty after all of your hard work. SamKnause 1 hr ago #1
Thank you... MiHale 19 min ago #8
What a wonderful set of photos. Your gardens are gorgeous erronis 1 hr ago #2
Thank you... MiHale 16 min ago #9
Is there a "How to get started on a shoestring budget for dummies" ? eppur_se_muova 1 hr ago #3
YouTube probably has tons of videos abou budget gardens... MiHale 6 min ago #12
Very nice. Thank you. twodogsbarking 1 hr ago #4
Thanks... MiHale 14 min ago #10
And when the bales are just piles of hay Figarosmom 57 min ago #5
Yes you can... MiHale 12 min ago #11
Cool! BeneteauBum 34 min ago #6
Very cool! I'm jealous of your gardening space! I only have a small patch and a bunch of pots. LymphocyteLover 33 min ago #7
Thanks...looks a little bigger than it really is... MiHale 47 sec ago #14
My garden is my church. Trueblue Texan 4 min ago #13
I feel the same... MiHale 2 sec ago #15

SamKnause

(14,954 posts)
1. I hope you have a plentiful bounty after all of your hard work.
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 09:37 AM
1 hr ago

Everything looks really nice.

erronis

(24,769 posts)
2. What a wonderful set of photos. Your gardens are gorgeous
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 09:41 AM
1 hr ago

and your re-use of material is admirable.

MiHale

(13,251 posts)
9. Thank you...
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 10:43 AM
16 min ago

We love to repurpose as much as we can. The center post in the greenhouse is the top part of a tree I had to cut down. Just debarked it a fit it in.

eppur_se_muova

(42,808 posts)
3. Is there a "How to get started on a shoestring budget for dummies" ?
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 09:52 AM
1 hr ago

Thinking of trying a few small plantings; onions and sweet potatoes are both good candidates.

I'm looking for a good way to grow fresh herbs (preferably year-round) but think that calls for more equipment.

MiHale

(13,251 posts)
12. YouTube probably has tons of videos abou budget gardens...
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 10:52 AM
6 min ago

We subscribe to a few trying to keep it as local as we can. We’ve had gardens for many years in different locales in Michigan so we’re pretty much self taught at the School of Gardening Failures.

You try…you succeed or you do not so well…but learning all the while.

Figarosmom

(14,299 posts)
5. And when the bales are just piles of hay
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 10:02 AM
57 min ago

You can grow 🥔 potatoes in the pile.😊 love the no dig garden!

MiHale

(13,251 posts)
11. Yes you can...
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 10:46 AM
12 min ago

We did that one year then decided to grow in large grow bags. No dig, just tip over on a tarp and get the goodies.

LymphocyteLover

(10,311 posts)
7. Very cool! I'm jealous of your gardening space! I only have a small patch and a bunch of pots.
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 10:25 AM
33 min ago

My patch is very crowded right now with tomatoes, potatoes, onions, peppers and a lot of volunteer spearmint and cilantro

MiHale

(13,251 posts)
14. Thanks...looks a little bigger than it really is...
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 10:58 AM
47 sec ago

But the room we have is more than a lot of people have. Our volunteers are mostly tomato plants they pop up everywhere..my dear wife throws her old tomatoes into the compost pile and by the next yea we are invaded by very generous volunteers…

Trueblue Texan

(4,688 posts)
13. My garden is my church.
Sat Jun 13, 2026, 10:55 AM
4 min ago

Definitely soothing to my soul. Fills me with deep joy and satisfaction. Thank you for sharing.

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