Posted by j on July 11, 2011, 8:37 pm
I have a section of the yard in full shade, a bit of English Ivy had
grown there poorly (Atlanta 7b Piedmont) and too much Wysteria. It's
currently cleared.
So, I've got a notice the power company is trimming in the area and
they are "giving" away dump trucks full of wood chips. It would be
mostly hardwoods here.
Can I cover my useless ground with them? Will I regret this? What
about the long term end result?
j
Posted by songbird on July 12, 2011, 2:25 am
j wrote:
> I have a section of the yard in full shade, a bit of English Ivy had
> grown there poorly (Atlanta 7b Piedmont) and too much Wysteria. It's
> currently cleared.
> So, I've got a notice the power company is trimming in the area and
> they are "giving" away dump trucks full of wood chips. It would be
> mostly hardwoods here.
> Can I cover my useless ground with them? Will I regret this? What
> about the long term end result?
other than being careful not to smother
the tree roots it is good stuff to have
handy.
the more finely it is ground the easier
it is to break down in the compost pile or
to use it in clay to help break up the
soil. add the right amount of a nitrogen
source and some dirt and water to moisten
and that's a good use of it. in time
finished compost. :)
if you'd like a more natural effect
you can dig some random trenches and
fill them in with wood chips, and then
use the dirt here or there to cover and
pile old fallen logs around or a stump
or two and mosses and leaves or whatever
else you can scrounge up in the way of
forest litter. that way you are creating
a mixed habitat for all sorts of creatures.
would be fun to set up and then monitor
for species as they move in. or even
add species as the area gets settled
and perks for a bit...
otherwise, we use wood chips in several
places and quite deeply too. the raccoons,
skunks, etc come through once in a while
and stir things up looking for worms and
other bugs. mushrooms pop up as it breaks
down. all good to us. in the end we
take up the bottom layer that is mostly
digested and use that in gardens that need
more organic matter. when the top layer
gets too thin we hope for finding more.
this past spring i dumped a few gallons
of water from washing morels in several
places and it will be interesting to see
if they will grow and in which locations.
good luck, :)
songbird
Posted by j on July 12, 2011, 9:39 pm
On 7/12/2011 2:25 AM, songbird wrote:
> j wrote:
>> I have a section of the yard in full shade, a bit of English Ivy had
>> grown there poorly (Atlanta 7b Piedmont) and too much Wysteria. It's
>> currently cleared.
>>
>> So, I've got a notice the power company is trimming in the area and
>> they are "giving" away dump trucks full of wood chips. It would be
>> mostly hardwoods here.
>>
>> Can I cover my useless ground with them? Will I regret this? What
>> about the long term end result?
> other than being careful not to smother
> the tree roots it is good stuff to have
> handy.
Well, I wasn't expecting such and elegant and enticing ode to wood
chips! I'm sold.
> the more finely it is ground the easier
> it is to break down in the compost pile or
> to use it in clay to help break up the
> soil. add the right amount of a nitrogen
> source and some dirt and water to moisten
> and that's a good use of it. in time
> finished compost. :)
> if you'd like a more natural effect
> you can dig some random trenches and
> fill them in with wood chips, and then
> use the dirt here or there to cover and
> pile old fallen logs around or a stump
> or two and mosses
I have a fondness for mosses and liverworts. And old logs with giant
fungi, they never last long though.
and leaves or whatever
> else you can scrounge up in the way of
> forest litter. that way you are creating
> a mixed habitat for all sorts of creatures.
> would be fun to set up and then monitor
> for species as they move in. or even
> add species as the area gets settled
> and perks for a bit...
It's suicidal here for anything a cat might catch.
> otherwise, we use wood chips in several
> places and quite deeply too. the raccoons,
> skunks, etc come through once in a while
> and stir things up looking for worms and
> other bugs. mushrooms pop up as it breaks
> down. all good to us. in the end we
> take up the bottom layer that is mostly
> digested and use that in gardens that need
> more organic matter. when the top layer
> gets too thin we hope for finding more.
I'll do a little experimenting. I'll sheet mulch (newsprint) some of
this before I lay down the wood chips and let the rest be natural. We'll
see how much direct contact with soil microbes contributes, the C/N
ratio of newsprint is so high it should be a good barrier.
Something here on the Nitrogen cycle:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nitrogen_cycle
> this past spring i dumped a few gallons
> of water from washing morels in several
> places and it will be interesting to see
> if they will grow and in which locations.
> good luck, :)
Thanks!
Jeff
> songbird
Posted by Tony Miklos on July 14, 2011, 10:04 pm
On 7/11/2011 8:37 PM, j wrote:
> I have a section of the yard in full shade, a bit of English Ivy had
> grown there poorly (Atlanta 7b Piedmont) and too much Wysteria. It's
> currently cleared.
> So, I've got a notice the power company is trimming in the area and they
> are "giving" away dump trucks full of wood chips. It would be mostly
> hardwoods here.
> Can I cover my useless ground with them? Will I regret this? What about
> the long term end result?
> j
I have a pile from maybe 3 years ago that I recently dug into. It's
like black gold, almost as nice as the mushroom soil. The plants love it.
> grown there poorly (Atlanta 7b Piedmont) and too much Wysteria. It's
> currently cleared.
> So, I've got a notice the power company is trimming in the area and
> they are "giving" away dump trucks full of wood chips. It would be
> mostly hardwoods here.
> Can I cover my useless ground with them? Will I regret this? What
> about the long term end result?