Wicking Beds

Constructing Garden Wicking Beds – Mairéid Sullivan
“The wicking worm bed is a highly productive growing system which not only produces more food from limited water, but also recycles waste organic material to provide plant nutrient and capture carbon. The essence is to form an underground reservoir of water or pond contained by a waterproof container or liner below the surface of the soil. Plants are productive because they have a continuous supply of water and nutrients.” Colin Austin
We have extreme water restrictions here in Melbourne. All garden watering must be done by hand-held hose, and only on two mornings of the week, so this method of gardening offers a great solution. Water doesn’t evaporate in the bottom of the wicking bed–it ‘wicks’ up to the roots, and, the top soil will stay soft, under the mulch. Now, we’ll only need to water once a week in summer, and less during the rest of the year.
The inventor of this system, Colin Austin has clips on YouTube, showing how to do this in small plastic containers, for use in small spaces:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=80-dkv1Au-8
And here is his comprehensive and highly informative website: http://www.waterright.com.au
Here is another good website, with easy to follow instructions.
http://www.easygrowvegetables.com/
NOTE: I wrote to Colin Austin to ask for advice on the best level for water and drainage, and received a terrific reply, which I’ve posted (with permission) at the end. (He explains that water will naturally wick up only 300mm.)
We built our wicking beds using a combination of suggested methods, as follows:
The sleepers, soil, mushroom compost, and rocks were delivered to the front of the house, and carried by the two of us to the north garden, at the back of the house! Still, even with the hard labour, we get great satisfaction from working in the garden–and, like all passionate gardeners, we take deep pleasure in nurturing, ‘knowing’, eating, and sharing our abundant harvests with our excellent neighbours.
Materials needed for two 5×1 meter beds (16 feet long), one of which was terraced, so needed more sleepers:
23 red gum sleepers, each 3.5 meters (8 feet) long and 75 Ml (3 inches) thick. Red gum timber (or similar) is much stronger than treated pine, which will poison the soil and will rot on the ground anyway. The price is almost the same.
11 meter (36 feet) long (comes in roles 20 x 4 meter wide). We used black 200 um plastic sheeting, and we now think it just isn’t strong enough. Next time we’ll look for the orange industrial strength plastic, which would be much less sensitive to pointy things cutting through it, and since it won’t be visible above the ground the colour won’t matter. HINT: we found a hole in one role of plastic, and sealed it with pool lining glue.)
10 meters (33 feet) 70% shade cloth (you can cut and overlap pieces.)
10 meters 65mm agi-pipe (33 feet) (perforated agricultural tubing) + plus 70mm pvc pipe (one length cut in half for the two beds) w/ elbows for attaching to agi-pipe. (Buy all three parts at one time,– to fit.)
NOTE: The garden bed gets watered from the top via this pvc pipe, creating an underground stream which waters the plants from below, hence ‘wicking’.
Soil, compost, and rocks (A square meter = approximately one metric ton):
1/2 sq. meter 7mm or 14 mm screening rocks (not river rocks)
1 sq. meter of organic soil
1 sq. meter mushroom compost (combined with our own organic vegetable compost)
Small bags of Blood & Bone, lime added to the soil from the old beds.

We plan on adding worms to the wicking beds next season, when the soil is fully wet.
NOTE: We purchased double this amount of soil and compost to spread around the other in-ground garden beds, which we plan to convert also.
Step 1.
We removed the soil from our existing 5×3 meter garden bed and then leveled and terraced the ground for the two new beds, which must be completely level for even water distribution. We put a layer of soft-sifted soil on the bottom for cushioning, and created a waterproof bed with the 200um plastic sheeting (make sure no sharp objects can cut into the plastic sheeting).
Step 2.

We added the agi-pipe, stretching the full length of the bed.
Step 3.

We covered the bottom of the bed to just above the pipe with the screening rocks.
Step 4.

We connected PVC pipe to the agi-pipe using a common pvc “elbow” attachment, then we covered the rocks with the shade cloth, to separate the soil from the rocks and pipe.
Step 5.

Then we sifted the old garden soil into the bed, removing stones, seeds, weeds and roots.
(The above photo was taken from inside the house).
This was backbreaking, tedious work,–bending, and reaching out with a heavy tray of soil, then shaking it to sift it out, so we put new soil in the second bed. Easy!
Step 6.

We did it!
We sifted the old garden soil, and added a generous mixture of our own organic compost, mushroom compost, lime, and blood & bone, –leaving a space at the top for mulch.
Step 7.

We filled the top with a layer of organic sugarcane mulch, and drilled drainage holes. (see letter, below, from Colin Austin re. options for placement of drainage holes.) When it was finished, we added the water through the pvc pipe – testing how long it took to fill the bed to the drainage hole, and measured the water level in the pvc pipe, so we can know in future, by looking into the pvc pipe, when the water is low.
Step 8.

Next, after a couple of days break, (to heal our sore bodies and attend to work in the studio) we built the second (terraced) bed on top of the old garden bed soil, (no more digging for us!
, using the remaining screening rocks to make a gravel pathway between. We waited until the waxing moon to plant above ground winter veggies, using a combination of seedlings started in our glass house, below, and seedlings from the local nursery.
We still use grow vegetables in the in-ground beds on the western side of the garden, next to the (8×10 ft) Glasshouse (which we saved from demolition by my mother’s new neighbour last May, and reassembled in Sept.) We saved a third of the internal space for sitting. This is a fantastic place to escape to with a nice cup of tea in the middle of a sunny winter day – freezing outside and so warm inside! Ben and I often go out there to play music –and finish off a nice bottle of red, after dinner.
In this patch, we currently have winter root veggies slowly coming up, – garlic, radishes, beetroot, carrots, onions, next to spring onions (planted earlier), with various lettuces, spinach, bok choy, and herbs out of view.

Email message from Colin Austin, the inventer of Wicking Beds, June 2009 (I’ve highlighted the essential information in red.)
Hi Maireid,
Well we have great debates here on this issue of the best depth for the water and soil. Peter (of easygrowvegetables.com) and my neighbour and I spend many hours over a bottle of red wine aurguing this point. If you do not like my answer write to Peter (pva36152@bigpond.net.au) and you will get a different view.
What we do agree on is that water will only wick up some 300 mm. In my early experiments I had my holes much higher than Peter but I watered until it reaches the holes then I don’t water again until all the water has gone. This means that the roots are only in saturated water for a short time. This seems to work fine if the beds are not regularly flooded by rain. We may get a couple of weeks when it rains every day and submersing the roots for that length of time is definitely not good.
Peter had his holes much lower to avoid getting the roots saturated.
Now we are making our beds deeper with about 300mm of soil above the high water line. Using the shade cloth this avoids any problem with water logging.
What we are debating now is how deep we can make the water reservoir. Out last lot of beds were 500mm overall giving 200mm for the water reservoir and 300mm for the soil bed. This is working fine.
I think that we could make the water reservoir a little deeper still. This cuts down the time between watering. On the latest bed I tried 300m and 300mm. Before, when we had to dig the trench, making it deeper was hard work. Now that we’re using raised beds digging is not so much of a problem. Because I am old the last bed I made I dug out all the top soil (about 300mm) then made the raised bed a further 300mm which was quite quick to make.
I have only just put the seeds in so do not know how it will work but I am optimistic. You can see picture on my other web site www.wickingbed.com
I will let you know how it goes.
Sorry there is not a simple answer. It also depends on what you are growing. I guess if you are after a rule of thumb make the soil layer equal to the natural root depth of the plant (for veggies about 300mm) and then decide the depth of the reservoir on how long you want between irrigations, but you will be lucky to get any benefit above 300mm.
Colin
About the author of this article: Mairéid Sullivan
First of all, thank you Mairéid for allowing me to present this article from your own website.
Besides being a real trooper in the garden, Mairéid is also an accomplished singer, narrator and producer of some stunning video presentations as can be seen on her website. I’ve been listening to some of the clips of her Celtic songs from her website and am mesmerized by them.
It is both an honor and a privilege to have Mairéid as a member of our rural independent community. Here’s to learning more from this generous and talented friend! – Doug
Mairéid latest video project, “Time After Time” is described as,
Time after Time is a celebration of the great heritage of ancient Celtic, North American and Australian peoples and represents the imaginative visuals Mairéid and Ben screen during their concerts–to help stimulate the visual cortex’s capacity for lyrical perception, wonder and love, through ‘immersion’ in panoramic and intimate visions of nature and compelling music.
“Time after Time Puts Imagery Back in the Cinema
… a film so rich in meaning and so fearless in its presentation that it cannot be linked with any standard genre of filmmaking.”
T.S. Kerrigan, poet, lawyer, reviewer American Reporter
“A lyrical and jubilant interpretation of the human spirit through time and cultures – a visual and aural feast to remind us of our common harmonious ancestry.”
Brian Kavanagh A.S.E. Film Editor
Australian Screenwriters Guild
Lifetime Achievement Award recipient
“A coming together – a sharing from the heart.”
Bobby Bunningurr, Elder of the Maliburr tribe,
Arnhem Land, Northern Territory, Australia
Listen To Mairéid’s Audio Clips Here
Comments (5)




Looks really interesting! How has it worked in practice? I’m also wondering how the water wicks up from the water reservoir into the soil above, since it looks like the water reservoir is full of gravel. Once the water level drops below the level of the shade cloth, how does the water wick up into the soil?
Hallo
I love your website here
I used the wicking bed
I live where it is solis rock No top soil, I made a small rock bed from rocks in this area Only one and a half meters square Very successful I do have to put shade cloth over in the summer , PLUS on those extreme days also That blue and silver insulation over the shade cloth as well and adjust them to the days heat,
I then manage a small 7 foot bed inground lower down our incline where it was not too rocky Have had one summer from it It was ok But I dont think I fed it enough I purchased nice soil , But will feed it better now,I then built an 8×5 bed from the rocks , filled it the wicking method and good soil Growing nicely tho still have the heat probs and also a Pine tree dropping needles onto it, which i attempt to remove.
We then got the tray of a utility, stood on bricks along side this big rock bed. Created a wicking bed , took the plastic all the way up the sides, We are in the process of shade over We have put in poles to enable us to have shade cloth over the tree beds, to stop the sun and the pine needles
No weeds, sucks the water up beautifully, and am growing nice vegies, Tho I do have a lot to learn about times to plant I always seem to late or plant wrong times,Pinted the truck tray to match the rocks,I am so happy and I pass the URL’s around to anyone interested In fact I live in a country town and will edit the URL in the local paper in the gardening section
I love your Website and photos Thank you and well done
Anne
Thank you Anne.
Would love to see some photos of your wicking bed if you have any to share.
Hi Maireid,
Thank you for sharing your valuable information on your wicking beds. I am in the process of making my first large above ground bed. I have followed your method pretty closely although I’ve used 5mm drainage rocks over the plastic (I used 2 layers on the bottom) and ag pipe. You mentioned you used screening rocks. I’m not sure of the difference between the two types. The landscaping supplier I bought the rocks from said they were the best to have on top of the ag pipe without cutting into the plastic. I was a bit concerned about them as they are ‘aggregate’ and I’m not sure how that will go with growing veges etc. I went ahead and used them anyway. Do you have any thoughts about this?
Thanks Cathy.
Hi, not trying to be picky, but I think you have your metric units mixed a bit. Square meters are used to express an area. To quantify amount of soil, gravel etc., one must use cubic units. (i.e. cubic meters). The other thing I will beg to differ with, is that cubic meter of gravel or sand would weigh a fair bit more than one ton. It is one cubic meter of water (1000 liters), that weighs one ton. Hope this helps and no offence please. Cheers Mark