MAKING & SELLING TIRE GARDENS
By Kurt Saxon
Raised beds are the best way to garden, for several reasons.
First, the plants are closer together so there is little weeding and greater
productivity. Since they are several inches off the ground there is less
stooping. The drainage is better. You supply the soil so there are no rocks,
and you don't have to dig or plow the garden. Raised beds are usually a
series of small garden plots which can be put here and there wherever there
is a few square feet of space.
The drawback is that they are expensive. Like with railroad
ties, which are costly and waste a lot of space in wood. Even 1x10 wooden
boards cost a lot and unless specially treated, they rot. Then there is
all that sawing and carpentry getting them together.
Tires are the answer. A standard P235/75R15 tire has 4
square feet of growing space when you cut out the sides right up to the
tread. It gives a bed 8 1/2 inches above the ground. A P215/75R15 is 6
3/4 inches above the ground and has less planting area so the P235/75R15
is your best choice.
If you are husky you can use a strong sharp hunting knife
to saw around the treads in about five minutes. But first you must use
a quarter-inch drill to make the starting hole.
Your saber-saw will need a wood cutting blade with 10
teeth to the inch. For faster cutting, grind both sides of the blade, leaving
the teeth, but very thin. This will cut through tire rubber like butter.
It's fun.
Many places selling tires will charge a customer a dollar
a piece to dispose of them. They don't want them. They're free. Go to your
Tire World or such in most towns, and take your pick from great piles.
They'll bless you for taking them away.
Any business selling and mounting tires will have a stack
in back you can have. Here you can take your pick of truck tires a foot
and a half thick with ten square feet of space with the side cut out, to
standards and compact tires, on down to little bitty tires from three-wheelers.
Compact tires make neat little beds which could be put
on decks, porches, along walks, etc. They are perfect for herb gardens.
A novel way would be to paint them in pastel colors and letter them "Catnip,"
"Thyme," "Marjoram," "Parsley," "Chives," etc. Most homeowners seeing them
would want a set. A profitable use for tires from three-wheelers would
be hanging baskets. These are often expensive but those made from three-wheeler
tires would cost almost nothing. To make one, cut out the side at the tread
and drill four holes with an eighth inch drill a half inch down the tread.
Then cut two strong wires; their length depending on your need. Push the
end of one wire from the outside to the inside and back out the next hole.
Do the same with the second wire and pull both wires taut. Then bring them
together above the tire and twist them into a three-inch strand and bend
it into a hook.
Cut a circle from one inch chicken wire to fit the bottom
inside of the tire. Then layer the bottom with grass, straw or moss and
fill the planter with soil. Now put in the plant and hang it up. These
would be especially good for growing cherry tomatoes on your patio.
But we're mainly interested in real gardens. Say you have
a regular garden space. You'd put P235/75R15 tires all around the fence.
The spaces between the tires' curves and the fence would be filled with
earth to plant more back there. Weeds in front could be dealt with by using
any weedeater as the tires would not be harmed and the plants inside would
not be in range. Actually, the walks between tires should be spread with
wood chips or gravel to eliminate weeds altogether.
A good thing about the tires is that they will never disintegrate.
So what makes them an environmental nuisance makes them perfect for a multi-lifetime
garden. Once these are set up, they are permanent. They will never wear
out in your grandchildren's lifetimes and are easy to maintain.
Of course, naked tires aren't very pretty. They should
be painted, especially if you mean to sell them. I suggest grass-green
in water-base exterior house paint. You can buy it cheaply in five-gallon
containers. A standard tire will take under a cup if turned inside out.
Turning the tires inside-out has five advantages. First is that the deep
rooted plants can go deeper without being stopped by the rim. Second is
that the tires gain an inch or more in height. third is that they are straight
instead of rounded, making for slightly more space. Fourth, they save paint,
as the treads take up much more paint than the smooth insides. Fifth, if
you are selling tire gardens, you can pile them like rubber bands in you
pickup, using up less space.
Turning the tires inside-out is easy if you know how.
The first step is to step on one side of the tire, pushing it to the ground.
Next, reach over and pull the other side of the tire up toward you. Then
keeping your right foot in place, step around with your left foot and put
it alongside your right foot from the other side. Now, keeping your left
foot on the flattened edge of the tire, push the tire over and grasp the
underside of the opposite side and pull. The tire will now be turned inside-out.
If the tires are laid out against a fence or wall, there
will be spaces between the curvatures of the tires and the backdrop. Instead
of filling these spaces with something to prevent weeds, it is best to
fill them with soil, as each space amounts to about a square foot of growing
area. These can be planted with a few onions, carrots, beets, etc.
If the backdrop is a wire fence, cardboard or plastic
can be put alongside the fence to keep the soil from going through. A ten-tire
layout will have four one-foot square spaces between the curvatures. These
spaces can also be planted with a pepper plant, an okra plant, an eggplant,
etc.
Start with a basic ten-tire garden plot. Line them up
in two rows with each tire separated a half inch from its neighbor. Fill
the spaces between the tires with soil for more plants.
You could fill your own garden with these 40 square foot
plots and use them as standards for your commercial enterprise. These would
produce ever so much more than regular gardens.
For instance, one tomato plant, properly supported, fed
and watered, would produce over 100 pounds of tomatoes. If you should have
10 such plants, that would be over 1,000 pounds. Sell them for 50 cents
a pound and get $500 for some pretty easy part-time work.
Tomatoes aren't seasonal, as most people believe. They
die from frost. Keep them warm, feed them well and they'll live for years,
producing and producing. A single tomato plant grown in a Japanese greenhouse
produced 10,000 pounds.
For tomatoes, cucumbers and Golden or any other small
squash, you should use cages. The reason for the cages is that the most
productive tomato plants grow up
and if not supported will sprawl and the tomatoes will
rot on the ground. The cages allow them to grow upward and you just pick
the tomatoes through the wire. The same goes for cucumbers and small squash.
For the cages, get a 150 foot, five foot high roll of
six-inch concrete reinforcing wire from any building supply store. Cut
it into three and one half foot lengths with lineman's pliers. If you don't
have strong hands, use a saber-saw with a No. 24 metal cutting blade. Hold
the wire so it doesn't shimmy and cut flush with the vertical wire. It
should zip through the strands one after another. If you don't have electricity
you can use a hacksaw and a metal-cutting blade.
Your 150 foot roll with give you 42 cages. I paid $43.00
tax included, which made each cage cost only $l.02 each.
A double use for the concrete reinforcing wire is for
a portable cold frame over the tires in early spring and late fall. First
bend the wire so it covers both sides of the tops of the tires. Then lay
plastic over it and weight it on both sides and the ends. Of course, this
is for your shorter plants.
The other use for the wire is for trellises. The concrete
reinforcing wire is as sturdy as any trellis material you will need. Just
cut the wire as for a cage. Then bend it slightly so it fits along the
inside of the tire and fill the tire with soil. Now plant your beans or
any climbing vegetable close to the wire and you have got the best trellis
ever.
When you get your roll of wire, lay it down so the loose
end is on the bottom. Jerk it so you have a few feet to work with. Count
across seven squares and cut flush on the far side of the horizontal strand.
Now you have three and a half feet and about two inches of vertical wire
facing you.
Take a 6 inch length of 3/8 inch galvanized pipe and bend
one inch of the wire back toward the roll, forming a neat hook. Then bend
the whole thing toward the last horizontal strand and connect the hooks
all along it. The cage won't be perfectly round and doesn't have to be.
But bend it by pressing until it's at least neat.
It might take a few minutes to learn to pull a wire here,
push a section there, press the cage somewhere else to get it pretty even
and to get the hooks to stay in place up and down the horizontal wire.
While learning to do this you can practice swearing. Anyway,
after about the third cage, you can cut the wire, bend the hooks and make
the whole cage in ten minutes or less.
This concrete reinforcing wire is rusty. Concrete doesn't
stick well to galvanized wire so I don't think you can get it galvanized
and fencing wire isn't as strong. In your own garden you may not care,
since there's never enough rust to really soil your hands as you pick.
However, it looks better painted. Just cleaning your brush on the outside
only take a little while and covers most of the rust.
You might spray-paint the cages before bending them. After
making the hooks, spray-paint the upwardly curved side with the nozzle
on the most misty setting. Then put another on top and spray-paint it and
so on. When the stack dries there won't be enough rusty spots to notice
and certainly not enough to get a customer dirty.
With this raised bed system you can also have a greenhouse
for each tire. The tire greenhouse is made of 6 ML greenhouse plastic ordered
through any hardware store. An 8 x 100 foot roll costs about $20 and makes
16 greenhouses for the caged tires or 32 for those without cages.
This mini-greenhouse lets you begin your garden two months
before the regular growing season. It also lets you keep growing two months
after the first frost. That way you'll get three garden crops a year instead
of two.
To make these mini-greenhouses, first roll out
and cut four 6 foot lengths of
plastic. Fold each over sideways and close the top and
side with 2 inch wide masking tape, neatly so there is one inch on each
side. Then run a hot iron slowly down the tape on the top and side, on
both sides of the tape, being careful not to get the iron on the bare plastic.
This will melt the plastic so there will be a permanent bond. To be sure,
put staples every four inches along the tape.
Take your pipe and bend the wires protruding over the
tops of the cages inward so they don't poke holes in the plastic.
The greenhouse will fit loosely over the cage and then
over the tire. It can be raised as high as needed to get at the bed and
for picking and performs all the functions of any greenhouse. It is very
stable around the cages since they are put in the tires before the soil
is added.
The plastic is guaranteed for two years on a greenhouse.
This is for year-round, all weather. These mini-greenhouses would be used
only two months each in early spring and late fall. They wouldn't be subjected
to the hot summer sun or the winter snow. Just using them when necessary
and storing them in winter and summer, they could last twice as long.
Since 100 feet will make 16 six foot greenhouses or 32
four footers, they are indeed inexpensive. That's only $1.25 for the caged
tires and $.63 each for the smaller ones. The smaller ones would be supported
by two 2 1/2 foot sticks stuck in the sides of the tires.
So much for the basic tire garden.
Another use for the tires is in making compost. This is
simply rotted organic matter such as weeds, garbage, manure and anything
else that will break down. Compost is your basic soil conditioner. Gardening
magazines show many designs for making composters. They usually involve
a lot of wood frames, chicken wire and such and can run into money.
With tires, you can make excellent composters at no cost
at all. Simply cut six standard tires at the treads, both sides. Put one
down on the bare ground, unless you have a cement or board surface. Fill
the first tire, then put on another. Keep filling and stacking until you've
used up all your organic matter, and if you have more, ready another set
of tires.
After a couple of weeks, lift off the top tire and lay
it down beside the stack. Then shovel what was in the top tire into the
one on the ground. Repeat with the next and so on. That's all there is
to turning compost. In a few weeks, when it all has an earthy smell, it's
ready to mix with soil.
Now for the economics of the tire garden.
If it's just for yourself and your family, you can just
raise all the veggies you can eat and sell the surplus. Just charge 30%
less than the stores and you'll sell all you can raise.
You could supply every restaurant for miles around. Organically
grown fresh garden vegetable taste ever so much better than those trucked
in from out-of-state. Tomatoes, alone, grown in real soil, locally, have
a taste no industrial tomato factory can match. Organic Gardening has had
several articles about people who make a good living growing nothing but
tomatoes.
Say you have a fairly large garden space of 100x100 feet.
For an initial investment of a few hundred dollars, you could lay out a
couple of hundred tires which could compete with any wholesale seller of
vegetables.
I'm not going to teach you how to garden. Your library
has dozens of good books covering every step of the art. I might suggest,
however, that you specialize in just three or four vegetables, get a reputation
for quality and freshness and make an excellent living growing and selling
them. But you might rather sell tire gardens themselves. Start with 10
tires, four cages (two for tomatoes, one for cucumbers and one for squash).
Add the planting medium.
The tires cost nothing. The cages cost $4.08. The planting
medium (two parts soil to one part compost) may cost up to $5.00 per tire,
or considerably less. Paint, may be a dollar, and your materials cost is
under $60.00. Of course, there's labor. But if you have a couple of buddies,
or make it a family business and sell the 10 tire complete gardens for
$250.00, you'd get about $190.00 profit or more. Aside from processing,
delivery and setup shouldn't take more than a couple of hours.
Marketing tire gardens is easy.
They would sell mainly to older people who couldn't go
get the tires, cut them and fill them but would be delighted to plant,
care for and harvest them. Most older people would shell out $250.00 in
a minute to insure a large portion of their food for the rest of their
lives.
So even if you don't appreciate this idea, older people
will. And there will be a market for all the tire gardens you can produce.
But there are a lot of mature young people, too. Not all of them are physical
enough to gather the materials for the gardens but would welcome them ready-made.
It's no trouble to get soil and compost. Look up "landscaping"
in your Yellow Pages. They'll deliver soil at well under 50 cents a cubic
foot, compost and whatever you need, by the truckload. If you just want
to set up a tire garden for yourself, your local nursery and garden supply
can sell you everything you need at a reasonable cost.
To run such a business, all you need is the simple, cheap
and easily available equipment described in this article. You will also
need a standard pickup truck, which you may already have. If you don't
have one, get one. If you drive a car, trade it in for a pickup. If you're
going into any kind of business involving hauling, you need a pickup, anyway.
Now to selling the service.
First you set up sample tire gardens, featuring all the
ideas in this article and ideas you will come up with. You might even stock
a supply of bedding plants, seeds, garden tools, etc., when you've become
established. But with your sample gardens, it would be best to have them
already started, plants and all. Then contact your local newspaper and
they'll be glad to do a feature story.
Put an ad in the same issue saying, "Come and see our
tire gardens and let us set up one for you! " People will start coming
around and you'll have all the business you can handle from then on.
Don't be afraid others will compete with you. You'll have
the jump on any competition if you do a good job, and people will choose
you over the competition.
Be sure to order the tire recycling book. It will give
you many more ideas for using tires both around your place and to make
a good, low-overhead living.
TIRE GARDEN UPDATE
This short update will appear in THE SURVIVOR (formerly
Shoestring Entrepreur) Volume 9, Issue 3
By Kurt Saxon
I made a tire garden, as described in my article, "Making
And Selling Tire Gardens", issue 2 of Shoestring Entrepreneur. It was very
productive and easy to work.
However, my advice to leave the bottom side of the tire
uncut was unwise. It didn't act as a reservoir. I had some of the tires
taken up at the end of the season to replace some of the soil I had mixed
improperly. I found the bottom rims root-bound.
Also, I had decided to have the tires turned inside-out
and this can't be done unless both sides are cut out. Turning the tires
inside-out has five advantages. First is that the deep-rooted plants can
go deeper without being stopped by the rim. Second is that the tires gain
an inch or more in height. Third is that they are straight instead of rounded,
making for slightly more space. Fourth, they save paint, as the treads
take up much more paint that the smooth insides. Fifth, if you are selling
tire gardens, you can pile them like rubber bands in your pickup, using
up less space.
Turning the tires inside-out is easy if you know how.
The first step is to step on one side of the tire, pushing it to the ground.
Next, reach over and pull the other side of the tire up toward you. Then,
keeping your right foot in place, step around with your left foot and put
it alongside your right foot from the other side. Now, keeping your left
foot on the flattened edge of the tire, push the tire over and grasp the
underside of the opposite side and pull. The tire will now be turned inside-out.
If the tires are laid out against a fence or wall, there
will be spaces between the curvatures of the tires and the backdrop. Instead
of filling these spaces with something to prevent weeds, it is best to
fill them with soil, as each space amounts to about a square foot of growing
area. These can be planted with a few onions, carrots, beets, etc.
If the backdrop is a wire fence, cardboard or plastic
can be put alongside the fence to keep the soil from going through. A ten-tire
layout will have four one-foot square spaces between the curvatures. These
spaces can also be planted with a pepper plant, an okra plant, an eggplant,
etc.
Rather than use pliers to bend the projections from the
tops of the reinforced concrete wire cages and the hooks to connect the
sides of the cages, I discovered a better tool. It is simply a six inch
length of 3/8 inch outside diameter galvanized pipe from the hardware store.
This is perfect. You simply put the pipe over the projection, the length
you want, and bend. This is ever so much easier and quicker.
In regards to the plastic mini-greenhouses for caged plants,
they are practical. However, ironing their edges is too uncertain in bonding
the plastic. A better way is to put the masking tape on as instructed,
then with a regular stapler, staple the masking tape and plastic about
one inch in and three inches apart. This should hold it together in anything
less than a tornado.
Also, you don't need to space the tires two inches apart
to accommodate the bottom of the plastic. Just place any sort of weights,
such as rocks, around the bottom, resting on the tire rim.
A double use for the concrete reinforcing wire is for
a portable cold frame over the tires in early spring and late fall. First
bend the wire so it covers both sides of the tops of the tires. Then lay
plastic over it and weight it on both sides and the ends. Of course, this
is for your shorter plants.
The other use for the wire is for trellises. The concrete
reinforcing wire is as sturdy as any trellis material you will need. Just
cut the wire as for a cage. Then bend it slightly so it fits along the
inside of the tire and fill the tire with soil. Now plant your beans or
any climbing vegetable close to the wire and you have got the best trellis
ever.
Be sure to order the tire recycling book. It will give
you many more ideas for using tires both around your place and to make
a good, low-overhead living.