The Rural Voice, 1991-05, Page 34RURAL LIVING
MAKE MINE
MULCH, PLEASE
by Rhea Hamilton -Seeger
I've just come in from a cool walk
around the garden. The crocuses are
blooming and already the red and ma-
roon striped leaves of the Greigii
tulips can be seen around the base of
the magnolia. I peeked under some
evergreen branches to see if the monk-
shood and delphiniums had survived
the winter. I was greeted with tight
swirls of green and red tinged clusters
of leaves ready to unfurl. This is the
time of spring that is the most diffi-
cult. My first inclination is to start
stripping away the layers of protective
leaves and limbs, to wake up the
plants I love to admire and smell each
season. But it was only early April
and clipping dead stalks and raking
stones and debris from the lawn was
all I could do.
I have been boning up on different
varieties of mulch and will be using
more this spring to cut down weeding.
Mulch helps conserve moisture and
keeps the soil at a more uniform temp-
erature. It's nature's way of keeping
the cycle of life going on. Protected
from heat and drought in summer, the
plants also seek winter protection un-
der the mulch. The soil prospers with
the addition of organic matter and the
ground becomes a haven for worms
and beneficial bacteria that create the
earth we all love to garden in.
I have used grass clippings around
the grapes and lots of straw around the
tomatoes and broccoli plants. I didn't
stake the tomatoes in the past, as the
straw keeps the weeds down and mud
off of the fruit. Each year I cut back
on the vegetable garden and increase
the perennial garden.
Now I have a leaf shredder, but the
12 bags of leaves the kids and I
bagged last fall will not amount to
much, since it takes four bushels of
leaves to make one bushel of leaf
mulch. Not to worry; the old hay in
the back of the barn can be used either
by itself or put through the shredder
too. For my own part I read a little
and do a lot of trial and error. But
when I write for you, I research my
topics, and am delighted when I can
share what I have learned with you.
If you are looking for a mulch with
a decorative touch, consider bark
chips or cocoa shells. Both take some
time to break down and look quite at-
tractive in ornamental gardens. White
stone or marble chips look especially
neat, but I would hate to tidy around
them if they became invaded by
weeds.
There are a variety of plastics that
can also be used in the vegetable gar-
den, but let's think seriously about this
choice. While it has proven effective
in some gardens, it doesn't add any
organics to the soil and earthworms,
those generous little soil builders,
can't get through it. Plastics do not
breathe as organic mulches do, and
can cause serious disease problems.
Plastic will break down after a year or
two, but can be a mess if not cleaned
up when this happens. Some land-
scapers find it beneficial to use under
bark mulches to lengthen their life.
Newspapers are another handy
mulch resource. They can be laid eight
pages deep and then covered with hay
or straw to weigh them down. Two
points to consider. Newsprint is a
form of sawdust and will temporarily
deplete nitrogen at the soil surface.
The inks being released into the soil
would indicate that this mulch should
be kept in the flower garden, and away
from the vegetable patch.
Another intriguing suggestion I
read was to use strips of old jute -
backed carpeting. It allows the soil to
breathe, keeps the moisture in, and
controls the temperature just as nicely
as some of the other selections. But
before you start ripping up that old
worn out carpet in the back room, con-
sider the organic aspects. If you are
going to mulch, you might as well use
something that will improve the soil
with time, and not help deplete it.
Now that you are mulched out, I
have a couple of points to keep in
mind. Mulch can be replenished
throughout the season. In the spring,
you should pull back the mulch from
the garden to let the sun warm the soil,
get the perennials going and prepare
for seeds.
Add some wood ashes and bone
meal to your garden, and, if the mulch
is getting rather thin, work it into the
garden before you put on more.
Characteristics
Longevity
Water retention
(reduction of surface evaporation)
Heat absorption
Soil heat retention
Weed control
Water penetration
Fertilizer value
Extra nutrients needed
for decomposition
Toxic qualities
Incidence of rotted fruit
over nonmulched plants
Cleanliness of fruit
Durability (can it be walked on?)
Effect on soil structure
Appearance of mulch
CHARACTERISTICS OF MULCHING MATERIALS
Sawdust
Decomposes about
1 /2 to 3/4" per year
Good
Poor
Fair
Fair
Good
Poor
Nitrogen
Usually none
Lower
Good
Good
Poor
Good
Straw
Not more than
one year
Poor
Poor
Poor
Poor
Good
Poor
Nitrogen
None
Unknown
(probably lower)
Good
Poor
Good
Poor
Manure
Not more than
one year
Poor to fair
Poor
Fair
Poor
Good
Good
None
Possibility, if applied
too heavily
Unknown
Poor
Poor
Good
Poor
Black paper
One growing
season or less
Good
Good
Good
Good
Fair to poor
None
None
If oil, tar, or creosote
impregnated
Lower
Excellent
Poor
Poor
Good
Black polyethylene
Two or more
years
Good
Good
Good
Excellent
None
None
None
None
Lower
Excellent
Good
Poor
Good
30 THE RURAL VOICE