
My partner and I always end up with lots of little plants in little pots. We aren't plant hoarders, but we do like to collect interesting things, we're always propagating plants, and one of us has a habit of buying things to plant in the garden when she doesn't have time to plant them...
The solution? This simple pallet-wood plant stand, which I based on @MitchellMc 's handy guide How to build a tiered plant stand (which he based on @JI 's Garden planter stand).

All the crosspieces are pallet timber, and the vertical ones are treated Pine sleepers. I used the MicroPro sienna sleepers because their brown colour seemed a better starting point for staining than regular green treated Pine.
I modified Mitchell's design a bit to use less wood, and also to keep the whole structure open so it would dry more quickly after rain or hose watering.

I screwed it together with my trusty little Ryobi One+ 18V drill driver and gave it a few coats of Intergrain UltraDeck timber oil, and we're really happy with it. So thanks to Mitchell and to JI!
The plant stand was my second pallet project. The first was this plant "skateboard".

We used to have an old sleeper propped up on a couple of bricks to keep a lot of little plants off the ground. It looked pretty crummy. This looks better, and I put castors on it so it's easy to move to sweep behind it, or to put it under cover during protracted rain events.
Both projects were fun and satisfying and quite easy once I'd managed to pull the pallets apart.
Breaking down the pallets was harder than I thought it would be. A treated Pine one came apart very easily, but a couple of heat-treated ones put up a real fight. The nails were very long and threaded and their heads were very narrow and flimsy, which made them hard to pull out with a claw hammer or pry bar.
The heat-treated wood was quite hard and brittle too, and I frequently damaged it when using a nail punch to punch out bits of nails whose heads had pulled into the timber when I was prising the pallets apart. Those nails came out, but so did big, chunky splinters of the timber. Good thing I was going for a rustic look!
I'd never made anything like this before, but after seeing so many great pallet projects here on Workshop I decided to have a crack. I'm glad I did!