Posted by trailer on April 22, 2009, 10:00 am
I have a garden that is next to the house and we need to keep the weeds to a
minimum if we can. I was planning on putting down mulch over black garden
paper.
I've noticed the various kinds of mulch-cedar, pine, eucalyptus, even rubber
mulch (expensive).
what's the best kind of mulch to use for weed control in a flower garden?
located in northern Texas.
Posted by kris anthem um on April 22, 2009, 8:22 pm
'trailer[_2_ Wrote:
> ;840365']I have a garden that is next to the house and
we need to keep
> the weeds to a
> minimum if we can. I was planning on putting down mulch over black
> garden
> paper.
>
> I've noticed the various kinds of mulch-cedar, pine, eucalyptus, even
> rubber
> mulch (expensive).
>
> what's the best kind of mulch to use for weed control in a flower
> garden?
>
> located in northern Texas.
i am in tropical australia but mulch is mulch and in my experience pine
or
eucalypt works a treat and smells good too boot. just put in plenty
of nitrogen
to counteract the effect of the mulch 'soaking up the
goodness' as it breaks
down, blood and bone or manure is ideal.
--
kris anthem um
Posted by trader4 on April 23, 2009, 8:26 am
On Apr 22, 8:22 pm, kris anthem um <kris.anthem.um.
4657...@gardenbanter.co.uk> wrote:
> 'trailer[_2_ Wrote:
> > ;840365']I have a garden that is next to the house and we need to keep
> > the weeds to a
> > minimum if we can. I was planning on putting down mulch over black
> > garden
> > paper.
> > I've noticed the various kinds of mulch-cedar, pine, eucalyptus, even
> > rubber
> > mulch (expensive).
> > what's the best kind of mulch to use for weed control in a flower
> > garden?
> > located in northern Texas.
> i am in tropical australia but mulch is mulch and in my experience pine
> or eucalypt works a treat and smells good too boot. just put in plenty
> of nitrogen to counteract the effect of the mulch 'soaking up the
> goodness' as it breaks down, blood and bone or manure is ideal.
> --
> kris anthem um
Any of the hardwood mulches work for me. Beyond that, it's mostly a
matter of appearance, ie whether you like it red, brown, black, etc.,
what's available locally, and price. I'd also skip the landscape
fabric. With 3 inches of mulch, you don't need it, it's just extra
work and creates problems of it's own.
Posted by Stubby on April 24, 2009, 11:00 am
> I have a garden that is next to the house and we need to keep the weeds to a
> minimum if we can. I was planning on putting down mulch over black garden
> paper.
> I've noticed the various kinds of mulch-cedar, pine, eucalyptus, even rubber
> mulch (expensive).
> what's the best kind of mulch to use for weed control in a flower garden?
> located in northern Texas.
I use 4 mil black plastic sheet on the tomato patch. Use a knife to
open a flap for each plant. I use PVC pipes and joints to support the
plants. A plumbing torch is good for burning holes in the plastic.
In the flower gardens we have tried lots of things. Newpapers, 3 or 4
pages and sprayed with water are good. After setting it out, you can
cover it with a "good" mulch for looks.
Any material that cuts off light is will work. You'll need some
fertilizer around each plant.
Posted by Steve on April 24, 2009, 5:42 pm
> A plumbing torch is good for burning holes in the plastic.
Do you inhale, stub?
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