Can you use old railroad ties to make raised garden beds?
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Yes you can.
You can, but should you? .... The kreosote (black sticky stuff) in the ties can possibly leach out into your soil. I have used them for raised flower beds and didn't have a problem but I don't think I would use them as a raised garden bed.
I wouldn't recommend it. They are treated with creosote. I'd use pressure treated lumber or . . . Even better . . . Cedar.
If you do, be sure to line the inside with heavy duty plastic. They are soaked with chemicals that will leach into the soil. I would only use if these will be flower beds and not edible gardening.
I've had them as part of our walkway border/landscaping for twenty years. No problems.
Railroad ties are coated with creosote which is toxic when it leaches into the soil. I do not recommend using railroad ties for a raised bed veggie garden. Even landscape timber is "treated" but it doesn't leach out like with RR ties. I have used regular untreated lumber or old scrap lumbar or cinder blocks for raised beds. If you have to use the RR ties, cover the "garden side" with a heavy plastic, which can be stabled on. This should prevent the creosote from leaching into the garden area.
Too many toxic chemicals to use for planting food
Ok, I used decorative Stine in the past for a small raised bed. But since I just finished my last chemo treatment for Breast Cancer and have 11 more rounds if HER2 drungs to go plus 10 years of pills to take I'm going all organic. So, I'm getting the message stay away from RR ties and landscape timber. I'm doing a lot of beds with walk paths between. I have 1/4 cleared acre to plant fruit trees in along with veggie beds. Im using heirloom seeds and no GMO! A bed for each veggie; yellow squash, tomatoes, peppers, onion, asparagus, cucumber, lima beans, black eye peas, spaghetti squash, sweet potato, 10 (8X8) beds. I'm trying to be cost effective. But know it will be an expensive outlay at first. But so was cancer . No one knows what triggers estrogen cells to go wacky. But eating all organic can't hurt. I don't drink, smoke or do drugs (only chemo). So you guys are saying use cinder block or cedar? Thanks so much! Oh and chemo killed the cancer. Nasty drugs though. So organic all the way now. Even organic meat, no antibiotics, steroids, or feed with GMO. So thank you guys for your help with my planning stage. I read up on premaculture but to much work to collect sticks and my HOA want allow the messy look. Garden must look neat. Wait till they see my small corn field. . More suggestions are welcome. You guys are great!