March in the Greenhouse
At home, besides my medicinal herb garden I also have a kitchen garden. I start almost everything from seed or cuttings, so I have a nice little ‘homey’ greenhouse to work in.
The greenhouse at home is unheated except for heat mats in raised grow beds, so most seedlings and starts go into the greenhouse around late March. Around here nothing goes into the ground before mid May-except peas- and we wait until the guys down the road have quit spraying in their fields.
This greenhouse is a nice size for home growing. It’s also a cheap affair, my “Cattle Panel” lean to.
The whole thing is a mere 16′ x 15′- and is attached to the back of the potting shed….or as I like to call it-the Mental Health Center.
There is a small mist system for cuttings, and an 8′x 16 shade house for the 100* months of July and August- it’s also a cattle panel job.
Here is the shade house frame, completely naked and without flooring. It will have it’s top on and have landscape fabric laid down by early summer. See? Nothing fancy. The LP tank for heating the potting shed is to the right.
Oh sure- go ahead and laugh at how ugly they are, but these things have held up through snow storms, straight line winds that took out a goat barn -WITH the goats in it- and more. Since I am in the middle of open fields I need sturdy. The metal arches wired together does the trick.
New plastic is definitely due this year on the greenhouse-I’ve gone 5 years on this bit and it is showing it’s age…and it was just a 4 year plastic.
The fact that the cats insist on climbing it doesn’t help with rips and tears, so until it’s replaced, all I can say is thank goodness for repair tape!



Woman, you are a wealth of info!! I’ve wanted a greenhouse for years, but didn’t think I could afford one. Of COURSE I can afford this set up! Genius!
Yep, if you aren’t vain and into looks, these babies rock!
Sturdy as all get out and completely inexpensive to construct. I heart them.
Hey Rhonda,
How do you anchor the cattle panel to the ground? We can have serious winds and storms out in the farm fields here….so I could see mine come loose and fly into a window or something! YIKES!!
Love the idea too!! My husband had a greenhouse but his was tiny and not that sturdy. He even used old windows but he lost them in a hail storm. So with what was left….the chickens are sleeping and laying in style!!
Thanks!!!
We have 160 acres out in front and big winds, too. These things have held up beautifully through a lot! The cattle panels are attached to a 2×8 board with fence staples. That board runs the length of the greenhouse and is attached to several 4×4 posts that were sunk into the ground and set in concrete. I can email some pictures if you like