William Bronson wrote:I use deck screws for these, but I'm not really satisfied with that.
Even very short screws are usually too long for the 1/2" pallet wood so I had to cut the points of with an angle grinder.
They would better in a thicker wood like what you have there.
Edit: going forward I will probably use the pole barn screws that come with a washer.
They are designed for wood to metal connections and their heads drive just as well as torx headed deck screws.
I've also considered copper or stainless steel wire, with or without a groove or holes on either end of the wood.
I've even considered tile for the sides, since I can get 2' long pieces for cheap or free.
Whatever the material the sides are made of, the less cutting or drilling required, the better.
Using grape vine to secure your oak slabs the bike wheel would go hard as hell, really leaning into the rustic side.
On the other hand,my bike coop always has scavenged brake cables on hand, very strong and very corrosion resistant.
Rivets are what I would want to use if the the goal is a super permanent and strong .
They would add cost and moves away from the scavenger esthetic/ethos.
If I had slabs like yours I would try good old nails as the fasteners to affix them to the wheels
I would also try building with them full length.
This would be a half cylinder, with as many hoops as needed, minimum two, laid down on the ground.
Keep the spokes and hub for the two wheels on either end of the bed.
Chock the bed with stones so it doesn't roll like a barrel, fill it with unfinished compost and plant it with sunchokes.
Over winter tarp it with a clear tarp, supported by the tops of the bike wheels.
When it's time harvest, lay a tarp next to the bed, remove the stones chocking it in place , and roll the entire bed upside down onto the tarp.
If you don't harvest, use the covered space for wintersown plant starts.
Suzette Thib wrote:What about putting in shiitake spawn in some of that oak? We have found that to be a good use for oak. You have a nice huge haul of it, congrats!
Rico Loma wrote:Bogdan your ingenuity knows no boundaries, good job! This is something I can emulate, as our local bike cooperative is a source for old unusable wheels.
Just wondering, did you worry about the heavy grease that might be inside the bike hub? Did you wipe it clean first? This might not be a problem, that hub when tightened has a darn good seal, just curious about your thinking. Please keep posting, your garden is making Ukraine more beautiful one leaf at a time, Godspeed my friend!
William Bronson wrote:Here is another way to use bike wheels to make a bed or planter.
Im moving away from using these metal mesh/ bike wheel cylinders as planters and towards using them as crop cages.
bogdan smith wrote:
William Bronson wrote:Here is another way to use bike wheels to make a bed or planter.
Im moving away from using these metal mesh/ bike wheel cylinders as planters and towards using them as crop cages.
very interesting, are these nets used for storing and carrying plants or do plants grow there? we grow zucchini in a similar way in plastic boxes, the horses are well warmed and ventilated
great solution, manual or drip irrigation? This is a good solution for protection against chickens too!William Bronson wrote:
bogdan smith wrote:
William Bronson wrote:Here is another way to use bike wheels to make a bed or planter.
Im moving away from using these metal mesh/ bike wheel cylinders as planters and towards using them as crop cages.
very interesting, are these nets used for storing and carrying plants or do plants grow there? we grow zucchini in a similar way in plastic boxes, the horses are well warmed and ventilated
I grow in them.
We have rodents that attack my mother's crops, so the vegetables and fruits we grow at her house is grown in cages.
They can be half full of soil with the rest of the space for plants to be protected.
I often use another wheel to make a lid.
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