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MULCHING
Mulching is the finest thing you can do for a garden bed and
I will use the rest of this space to put to rest any doubts
you may have as to the veracity of that statement.
Let’s take the first point; fertilizing and chemicals. While
fertilizers do offer nutrients to the plants in a readily
available form, the tendency of most Americans is to reach
for the blue stuff (I won’t mention a specific brand, but I
think we all know what we’re talking about here). That blue
stuff (and most of the fertilizers available today) rely on
water soluble nitrogen as their primary ingredient, and that
is not a very good thing for our garden or the environment.
The problem with water soluble nitrogen is that it’s water
soluble; sure, it makes it real easy to put on, but the next
rain washes whatever didn’t make it into a plant right out
of the root zone and into the water table. Bad for our
garden (no more food), bad for the water table (too much
food). The worst water pollution problem in the U.S. stopped
being industrial pollution long ago, suburban run-off is the
big culprit in settled areas and agricultural run-off is the
big offender in rural areas and water-soluble nitrogen is a
leading cause in both cases. Fertilizing organically is a
great way to cut down on water pollution and create a
healthier garden, and mulching is a great way to do just
that (more in a moment).
Let’s take the next two points together; soil amendments and
tilling. First of all, any time you break up the soil, you
begin to break it into smaller and smaller pieces. Done
repeatedly, you eventually break that soil into dust, so the
only thing holding the soil together is cohesion (water
clinging to water); take that away and the dust heads east
(or wherever the wind is blowing). Just ask the folks in
Oklahoma how that worked out; the soil profile in their neck
of the woods still hasn’t fully recovered from the Dustbowl
of the Thirties! But (as some might reply) we can add peat
or humus to the soil as we till. Sure you can. But now we’ve
created another soil interface for the plants roots to
negotiate (a soil interface is any abrupt change in soil
structure; i.e., the difference between the soil in the
container you are planting and the soil it is being planted
in). Roots don’t like to move between soil interfaces, so
now that we’ve created one interface between the pot and the
ground, lets not create another between the ground we plant
in and the soil 9 inches below it (average depth a roto-tiller
works in those amendments). So tilling in those amendments
won’t work…
The trick here is to incorporate organic content (because it
won’t wash out) into the soil in a manner that doesn’t break
up the soil or create new soil interfaces. That trick is
easily accomplished by, you guessed it, mulching. As if that
wasn’t reason enough, mulch also helps retain soil by
reducing run-off, retains water by creating a moisture
barrier for the soil, creates optimal growing situations for
roots by keeping soil temps down (not many plants grow above
80 degrees, top or bottom), and most importantly for many of
us, adds that finishing touch to the bed or border (we’ve
taken to referring to mulching as “frosting the cake” around
our household; a very apt description we think).
There are good mulches and bad ones and a bad mulch can do
far more damage than good, so let’s look at some of the
alternatives and assess what might be the best choice for
your garden. First let’s look at what might be lying around
the yard. One of my favorite mulches is compost, that
organic gem you can cook up yourself by chopping up all the
leaves and grass clippings and kitchen waste (NO meat or
fats!) and tumbling them around for a couple months and
voila! Instant soil! The down side to mulching with compost
is that it’s such good soil that weeds fall in love the
instant they hit it and grow quickly, and compost takes a
long time to produce and you use it so quickly as a mulch.
Good stuff, but save it for the roses and the better
veggies.
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Backyard Composter
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Next on my list is bark mulch, and this is the stuff
the grand majority of us use and with good reason. It’s
reasonably cheap, readily available, and we’re pretty
used to seeing it around. Another good point is the fairly
quick turnover time from mulch to soil. Now many of you out
there are shaking your head. “Scott, you big dummy, if it
turns over quicker that means I have to mulch more often!
That’s why I buy the nuggets!” Yet what’s left of the
nuggets in a years time looks so ratty that you end up
buying more and putting them on; the only difference between
your garden and mine is I’ve gained another inch of rich
organic matter and I’ve hauled a few more wheelbarrows than
you. The price of those nuggets is more expensive than my
bulk bark so we end up spending the same amount and I get
better coverage. That’s if your paying for the bulk mulch at
all; I get it for free at the town transfer station where my
town accepts garden waste, tub grinds it and puts it in a
big pile for us to take away for free! That used to be
hundreds of dollars in a year for me; now I get it for my
tax dollars and the town retains soil by keeping it at home.
I love win-win stuff like that! Some barks are better than
others (more on that in a moment) and I get whatever people
have thrown in the pile, but it’s also got a compost
component (from the grass clippings and such), so I’m happy
as a pig in … well, compost!
Some wood mulches are good, some not so, and some have
little use as mulch. The worst offender of the bunch is one
I see used all the time and I suspect is even more prevalent
than I know; trail chips. You know the stuff that comes out
of the business end of a wood chipper. It’s called trail
chips by most folks ‘cuz that’s all its good for. The bark
mulch is okay because it breaks down fairly easily. The
heartwood needs to go through a few changes before it breaks
down; these entail conversion by critters in the soil that
actually use nitrogen for fuel. So if we put trail chips in
the garden, we’ve actually introduced an organism who will
compete with our plants for food! Might as well throw grass
seed in there too! Hardwood mulches suffer from much the
same problem. Softwoods like pine, spruce and hemlock
incorporate into the soil easily and add nutrients, so
there’s the obvious choice in the wood category (although
free is good, those wood chips from the tree guys come at a
high but unseen price, as your plants dwindle away to
nothing).
The stuff I like the least is the stuff y’all seem to like
the best; the red “cedar” mulch (which is really ground up
pine pallets died red; I occasionally run across the real
deal, but it’s rare and expensive). This is heartwood with
all the attendant problems and what’s more, when the color
starts to fade, you put on another layer. And the next year
another. And another. I’ve been called in to find out why a
garden is going south and found four and five layers on top
of each other like rings on a tree. No water penetrates, the
heartwood uses up the available nitrogen, and the plants
croak. I don’t care how cheap it is or what color they dye
it (those colors compete with the plants!), you are doing
yourself no good by using this stuff. Mulches that
incorporate help the soil and plants. Ones that don’t hurt
it. Period.
There are other mulches that I am seeing more and more
availability on. Buckwheat hulls seem to be catching on; I
am leery of the anti-fungal properties it possesses as it
could hurt healthy soil flora (and they blow around too
easily). Cocoa mulch is a fantastic organic component; too
good really as it will grow those healthy soil fungi I was
just talking about on top of the mulch (a tad unsightly, but
I still buy them to add to my bonsai soil and to throw into
my compost; good stuff!). I can’t say I’ve tried the
licorice root yet, but I hear good things. There are rubber
mulches and stone mulches, but these do nothing to help your
soil and will eventually fill up with organic content, and
then what? You have to remove everything and start over. And
you thought organic mulch was too much work?
Just remember all the good and bad that mulch can do, and
find the one that you like and that works for you (I know a
mulch is working for me when the worms start getting more
populous and stronger; a sure sign). In a few years your
soil will start to get as black as night and the worms will
do all the tilling you need. All will be well in the garden.
So get out there and frost the cake (you’ll be glad you
did).
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