Far Out Flora

Gardening in the Outerlands of San Francisco

DIY Succulent Pallet Table

June 4, 2011 by Matti | 222 Comments

Max with the new Succulent Table.

Max with the new Succulent Table.

Can you believe that our latest DIY project was once just a couple of junky pallets and some scrappy table legs?  Crazy…if I didn’t have photos, I wouldn’t believe it myself.  Not too long ago, we whipped out a coffee table sized succulent table out of an old shipping crate.  Now we scaled it up.

The pallets.

The pallets.

First bit of advice, deconstructing pallets are a big pain unless you have the right tools…and our hammer and wall scrapper wasn’t quite doing the trick.  Boards were cracking and splitting left and right.  Good news.  We had three pallets to figure out how to do it, and by the second one…we were getting usable boards.

Couple good planks.

Couple good planks.

Love the scares of time left on these chunks of pallet wood.

Attaching the legs.

Attaching the legs.

After pulling apart two pallets, we used the 2 x 4 sized boards to make a rectangular frame to attached the appropriated table legs.  Debate went back and forth whether or not to strip the paint off the legs…we’re not huge fans of washed out creamy yellow.  We ended up just leaving them dinged up how we found them.  In the end, it worked in our favor.

Dry run for fittings.

Dry run for fittings.

Like TV magic (and 2 days later), the table was more or less put together.  We got so into the project that we forgot to take some pics during the building of the succulent hole, oops.  Basically, the top is made up in three sections.  Two flat boards make the right side, three boards make the left.  The center three boards were built as a separate planting box…again all using parts of the pallet.  We made it this way because we knew the succulent table was going to journey about 45 minutes south to Sunset Test Garden.  The plan was to make the succulent section removable so that it could ride inside the car while the rest of the table may need to be strapped to the roof of the Subaru.

Megan with some semps.

Megan with some semps.

After a weekend of slivers and sweat, we finally got to plant this baby.  Megan had the pleasure to do the ceremonial dividing up of the first bunch of semps.

Getting messy.

Getting messy.

3/8 inch holes where drilled in the bottom, and we decided to go with a fast draining cactus mix.  The bulk of the plants are Sempervivum, Sedum, and a hint of Orostachys iwarenge.  We plugged in some pea sized pebbles to stabilize and dress up the top.

Packing them in.

Packing them in.

Yeah, we didn’t hold back on jamming them.  By all means, it would be fine to plant the strip thin and let it grow in.  But when you need it to look full fast…you just hold, tuck and stick until it looks more or less done.

Succulents playing together.

Succulents playing together.

 

Finishing touches.

Finishing touches.

Here you can get a sense of how the center box is separate from the rest of the table…great for traveling.

Ready for action.

Ready for action.

Speaking of journeys, this guy is on view Jun 4-5 at the Sunset Magazine Celebration Weekend in their Test Garden down in Menlo Park, CA.  While your there, say hi to Johanna Silver, aka Ask a Garden Girl and Sunset Test Guru.  She has rock star garden skills and one of the most engaging personalities you’ll find.

Hey, you can stay up-to-date with us on Facebook or place an ad.  We have super low intro pricing right now.

– Far Out Flora

 

February 4, 2011
by Matti
75 Comments

DIY Succulent Table

Mission DIY succulent table complete.  I’ve wanted to make this baby for months.  It’s a dissected old shipping crate and some other random scraps of wood lying around the house turned into a patio side table with a planting strip … Continue reading

July 13, 2010
by Megan
4 Comments

Building REsources Rules

Are you a DIY Gardener looking for unusual objects to add to your garden?  Have a strong attraction to rusty and shiny objects?  Then head over to Building REsources, San Francisco’s true Reduce, Reuse, Recycle place that caters to the … Continue reading

March 18, 2010
by Megan
10 Comments

Crate Metamorphosis

I rescued this shipping crate before it became landfill.  Below is the end product, but there are some before shots too. This project has been lingering for awhile, and I finally tackled it this past weekend.  Below is the wooden … Continue reading

Rain Recycler, for under $10

January 18, 2010 by Matti | 0 comments

Many of our plants cannot handle tap water such as our Nepenthes, a tropical pitcher plant.  Distilled water over time is not cheap, and I still cannot fathom shipping water from anywhere.  Time to build a rain catcher now that the rainy season is starting in San Francisco.

Rain Catcher working hard.

The basic idea came to me from my time spent sailing on Ladybug and their need to catch drinking water.  Essentially, they would use their bimini to catch water, it ran through a tube, and into a container.  You probably have most if not all of this laying around the house.

You need:

  • bucket or bowl
  • 3-6′ of non toxic tubing (I used 1/4 diam. non toxic tubing)
  • drill (or nail if no drill)
  • mesh (optional..but will keep debris out of your tube)
  • scissors
  • hot glue gun

Steps

  1. In your bucket, make a hole a little smaller than the outer diameter of your tubing.  If you do not have a drill, you can heat up a nail and melt a hole.  Make the hold close to the bottom of the bucket, but allowing the bucket to sit flat on a surface.
  2. Push tube through hole.
  3. Hot glue the tube into place.  I set the tube 1/4″ through the hole.  Hot glue often feels cool, before it is completely set…so after you think it is cool, wait another 2 minutes or run it under cold water.  The hot glue not only keeps the tube in place, it also fills in any gaps that may leak.
  4. Cut out a piece of mesh.  I molded it with my fingers to make a little bubble to allow it to freely cover the tubing.
  5. Hot glue mesh into place.  If you cooled the hot glue with water, dry the area first.
  6. You are ready to catch water.  You can either put the tube into the final container, or put the tubing into the bucket so that it does leak out until you are ready to store it.

Push tube through hole

Showing tube going through the bucket

Showing tube going through the bucket

Mesh covering tube and hole

Mesh covering tube and hole

Done. Keep the tube in the bucket until ready to pour into final storage

Done. Keep the tube in the bucket until ready to pour into final storage

NOTES

  • Bucket…the larger the opening , the more rain you can catch.  I picked up a 21″ plastic bowl in Chinatown for $5
  • Tubing…good rule of thumb, if it smell plasticy, your plants probably will not like the water.  Again, I picked up 6′ in Chinatown for $3
  • All the rest of the materials /tools I had laying around the house.
When ready, pour into final contain.  I reuse the old distilled gal. containers

When ready, pour into final contain. I reuse the old distilled gal. containers

–Far Out Flora