How to Create a Vegetable Garden on a Slope (2024)

, written by Barbara Pleasant How to Create a Vegetable Garden on a Slope (1)

How to Create a Vegetable Garden on a Slope (2)

When the best place you have to grow vegetables and herbs is a sloping hillside, you can terrace your way to a garden that’s beautiful, productive, and reasonably easy to maintain. I have been gardening on a slope for more than 10 years, and every season I learn a little more about the hillside and its potential.

Planning a Terraced Vegetable Garden

Because water always runs downhill, it is always best to stabilise a slope with reinforced beds that run across the slope. An ideal design is comprised of beds sized to fit the hillside in ways that make them easy to plant and maintain.

Start by making a side view drawing of your slope as shown below. Then use a measuring tape to estimate the site’s rise (elevation gain) and run (distance from front to back). You can now play with various bed designs and materials, using your drawing as a planning tool. Very steep slopes that require steps to navigate need beds that sit atop one another and must be maintained from the sides, while more moderate slopes can include pathways between shallower tiered beds. Level places from which to work are invaluable when gardening on a slope, because gravity pulls people downhill, too.

How to Create a Vegetable Garden on a Slope (3)

Don’t take on too much at first, because most terraced vegetable gardens are tended by hand, which requires slogging up and down a slope in addition to the usual stooping, lifting and bending. It’s like being on a stair-step machine sometimes but you get used to it, which may be one of the reasons why living in the mountains is associated with longer life.

Raised Beds for a Sloping Vegetable Garden

Building a terraced vegetable garden is basically making raised beds on a slope, and it’s important to start at the bottom and work your way up. Some sites may need only a low stone wall to transform them into good gardening space, while others will require compact beds stacked up like boxes.

How to Create a Vegetable Garden on a Slope (4)

The frames or low walls used to stabilise a terraced vegetable garden can be made from many different materials, including those discussed below. All can be reinforced with iron rebar stakes, which are far superior to wood stakes because they never rot.

Natural stone is often free if you live in a mountainous area, and as long as you stack a low wall so that it tilts slightly backward, into the slope, it should need only minor restacking at the beginning of each season. Plants and stone always look great together, so it is often a top choice for hillside beds less than 18 inches (45cm) high.

Retaining wall blocks that mimic stone are easy to work with, and their uniform size simplifies bed construction. Extra reinforcement is not needed for block retaining walls less than 18 inches (45cm) high. Concrete blocks are less costly, though heavy to handle.

Logs and untreated boards need replacing every few years, but this is part of their value in a terraced vegetable garden. As the wood decays, mycelium from the wood-feeding fungi also infiltrate adjoining soil. In this way, retaining logs or boards have what you might call a hugelkultur effect. In hugelkultur, logs or other wood are buried beneath a hilled garden which slowly benefits from the wood’s decomposition. A terraced vegetable garden stabilised by raw wood follows similar processes, only from the side.

How to Create a Vegetable Garden on a Slope (5)

Steel panels are trendy now, and they can last forever, as can some types of plastic lumber. There are no rules on the materials you choose provided they don’t leach nasty chemicals into the soil, as can happen with treated lumber or landscape timbers.

By midsummer, the structure that underpins a terraced vegetable garden disappears as it is overrun by exuberant plants. I love the way plants stack up in a hillside garden, layer upon layer, so that it looks even more lush than it really is. Drainage is never an issue, though I’ve noticed that some soil moves downhill along with rainwater. Over time, the lowest tiers of a sloped site gain organic matter as it trickles down from the higher beds, so adding organic matter to the higher beds benefits the lower ones, too. This is one of the little quirks you learn from gardening on a slope.

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How to Create a Vegetable Garden on a Slope (2024)

FAQs

How to Create a Vegetable Garden on a Slope? ›

Because water always runs downhill, it is always best to stabilize a slope with reinforced beds that run across the slope. An ideal design is comprised of beds sized to fit the hillside in ways that make them easy to plant and maintain.

How to create a vegetable garden on a slope? ›

If you plant vegetables in rows on a slope, place the rows across the slope, perpendicular to it, just as you see in pictures of contour farming, and water and soil won't run downhill along the rows. If your bed slopes to the south or west, your vegetables and herbs will enjoy the heat gathered by good sun orientation.

Can a garden bed be on a slope? ›

The key is to build a horizontal raised bed so you can stop erosion while reaping the benefits of raised beds and terraced gardens. Building an elevated garden bed on a slope may seem like a daunting task that requires advanced carpentry skills, but it can be a very simple DIY project.

What is the best material for a sloping garden path? ›

Granite is naturally slip-resistant, which makes it one of the safer materials for a patio or path, particularly a sloping one. Granite is very durable and resilient, meaning it is well suited to the rigours of being used regularly as a walkway.

How do you stop garden slope erosion? ›

The best plant for erosion control is one that holds the soil in place. Many cover crops, such as rye and clover, create nets of roots that hold soil together and help reduce weeds. Ornamental ground cover, including ivy, creeping juniper and periwinkle, are also proven erosion control solutions.

What crops grow best on a slope? ›

Deep-rooted plants, such as prairie plants, hold their own on even the steepest slope. Ornamental grasses, ground cover roses and shrubs (including shrub roses with a sprawling growth habit) work well in hillside and slope planting. Native plants are nearly always an excellent choice.

What is the best mulch for a slope? ›

Shredded bark is one of the most common and least expensive types of mulch. It comes from a variety of sources, including cedar trees. Shredded bark is the best mulch for slopes, breaking down relatively slowly.

How to level a vegetable garden? ›

For a garden bed, you should be able to adequately level the area by eye with a rake. Rakes like this Spear & Jackson 18 Tine Landscapers Rake are handy because they come with a spreading bar on the back to level the area.

How to put garden beds on a slope? ›

You'll need to carve out the side of the hill to make a level, stepped location for your raised beds. Leave enough room for both the raised bed and your intended reinforcement wall, plus additional room if you want to access the side of the bed closest to the reinforcement.

How do you build soil on a slope? ›

Plant Ground Cover: Planting ground cover plants like grass, clover, or other erosion-control plants can establish a root system that helps bind the soil together. Terracing: Creating terraces or retaining walls can break up the slope into smaller, more manageable sections.

How much slope is too much for a garden? ›

How steep does a slope have to be to spell trouble? Any area with a drop of one or more feet every for feet (25%) spells trouble for mowing and other maintenance. A crest that is not rounded off will also guarantee scalping with each pass of the mower.

How to landscape a steep slope on a budget? ›

30 Dec How to Landscape a Steep Slope on a Budget: Tips from the Pros
  1. Tip #1: Use Multiple Native Plants.
  2. Tip #2: Discover Ground Covers.
  3. Tip #3: Build a Rock Garden.
  4. Tip #4: Create a Water Feature.
  5. Design Your Personal Paradise with Santa Rita Landscaping.
Dec 30, 2022

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