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Mulch
Mulching is one of the simplest ways to enhance your garden. It insulates the soil, protects it from erosion, conserves moisture, prevents weed growth, reduces soil compaction from heavy rain, provides a beautiful finishing touch to your garden, and may even improve soil quality. Mulching, or top dress, refers to covering the bare ground in your garden by spreading an organic material, or some sort of rock. Many materials have been tried and proven effective as mulches: ground bark, leaves, sawdust, straw, processed by-products (grape and apple pumice), and lawn clippings.
Mulch should not be confused with compost, which is a soil amendment. Mulch is used as a top dressing after plants and irrigation have been installed. Mulch covers drip irrigation, keeps the soil cooler, reduces evaporation and makes the garden look neat and tidy.
Organic mulches can be found:
Fir Walk-On Bark from B.D. However, it is only available in bulk (by the truck load)
* There is no consistency in the industry to the use of the term "walk-on bark." You have to choose on a case-by-case basis. We suggest that you acquire some of one of the two products above and then use it as a basis for comparison for future purchases. You are looking for long, fuzzy shreds with a small amount of flakes and chips; no chunks, no trash, no weeds, no green wood.
Wood bark mulch.
General tips:
Never irrigate under a mature oak. Instead, use an attractive layer of stone mulch.
Mulch Myths Myth No. 1: Mulch provides a permanent barrier to weeds. While mulch reduces the number of weeds, some pesky nuisances may still manage to grow through the mulch, or on top of it. Weeds will appear in new landscapes for the first year or two, even with mulch, because of the abundance of weed seeds in the soil. However, once the weeds are brought under control, fewer will follow. Organic mulch needs to be replenished when decomposed to less than 1 inch thick. The thicker the mulch the easier it is to weed.
Myth No. 2: Mulch placed against your house will attract termites. In reality, it’s moisture, not mulch, which attracts termites. So any landscaping, including shrubs, can lure the unwanted critters. Irrigation systems up against the house also create a termite-conducive environment. Even gravel or rocks around the base of a house can hold in the moisture attractive to termites.
Myth No. 3: There’s no wrong way to mulch. When mulching, keep the bark or rock one to two inches away from stems. Mulch creates a warm and humid environment that is perfect for the establishment of various fungi that can injure or kill the plants. Also, avoid covering the crown of dormant perennials.
How Much Mulch?
Buying mulch in bulk to reduce the price
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