Once built, it was placed on the site of the garden and a thick layer of newspaper was used as ground cover. The bottom was then filled with seaweed -- also free from a local beach. The rest was filled with a mixture of soil and home-made compost.
With that done, the garden is now ready for spring planting.
There are lots of easy-care vegetable plants for the backyard gardener. Try tomatoes, celery, courgettes, peppers, sweet corn, pumpkins, potatoes, peas, beans, carrots, lettuce or silver beet. For herbs and companion plants try basil, rosemary, lavender, chamomile, marigolds and borage.
That's the veges taken care of -- now to add the fruit trees. The biggest job is deciding which trees to grow and where to put them. Dig a hole about one and a half times deeper and wider than the root ball of the tree. Place a slow-release fertiliser in the bottom, put in the tree, and fill the hole, making sure to compress the soil while back-filling to prevent any air pockets. Stake and tie the tree to prevent root trauma, but not so tight as to strangle it.
Keep the base of the tree weed-free by covering with mulch, which will also keep the ground nice and moist. Although garden suppliers will recommend you purchase fertilisers, many gardeners prefer to feed their trees with natural products such as animal manure and home-made compost.
We reckon the perfect backyard orchard would have an orange, grapefruit, mandarin (for school lunches and snacks), lemon, tamarillo, feijoa, plum, peach, two apple trees -- one for eating and one for cooking -- as well as passion fruit and grape vines.
There are loads of other options and those with space may like to consider figs (which are delicious fresh), guavas (which make excellent jams if you can get to them before the birds do), and an avocado tree.
Some people say they don't have the time to garden, which is why busy oily raggers like "easy" gardening.
Frugality is a matter of degree so although we would not expect everyone to transform their entire backyard into a food basket, everyone can do something to recession-proof their food costs -- and enjoy the benefits of home-grown produce.
If you have a favourite recipe or oily rag tip that works well for your family, send it to us at oilyrag.co.nz, or by writing to Living off the Smell of an Oily Rag, PO Box 984, Whangarei, and we will relay it to the readers of this column.