I really appreciate you taking a non-glyphosate approach. My daughter has leukemia, she was diagnosed at age 4. I don’t usually comment but I wanted to thank you for other options to this cancer-causing chemical!
Thanks for sharing that personal expression Tierney! I'm sorry to hear that she's battling that. But I'm glad to hear she has such a loving and caring Mom. I wish you and your family all the best! Certainly avoiding pesticide and herbicide exposure is a good strategy for ALL of us!!
Awww, that's terrible! How is she doing? I get nervous of people using it, my in-laws have so much property to keep up, they won't do anything else on their fence lines. I guess it is what it is bit I'm not a fan of it.
I appreciate how your use of subtle verbage to instruct all while describing your reasoning intellectually. Saying phrases like "consider this" vs. "do this" It's a very calming effect contrary to being preached at
Started using cardboard 3 years ago...best decision ever! My sister owns a liquor store so getting boxes is no problem! Landscape looks great and am now using my extra time expanding my garden. .
Excellent video- just the info I needed. Thanks a BUNCH. Here's a suggestion for you as "payback" since I am an HVAC guy. Use some form of protection around your heat pump unit to prevent the plants from interfering with air flow towards the unit. One option might be plastic construction fencing. The idea is to prevent the plants from obstructing airflow to or from the unit. If airflow is obstructed, the system becomes less efficient and therefore energy costs increase. Additionally, the plants can potentially cause mechanical problems and/or accelerated corrosion of the unit. There should be at least 6 inches of clearance around the unit where no obstructions exist. Consult your owners manual to verify. Thanks again!
I found your video last spring. Yes i tried the card board. I dont know how to post my photo to show everyone it really works. I am so pleased with the results 1 yr later. Im now doing this technique in the front bed. Thank you
Hello from the UK!! I have used this technique last spring to create a new flower border and it works brilliantly. The cardboard is no longer visible and the border has had hardly any weeds for a year. Your video explains it so perfectly!! Like the planting too, very subtle !!
You are so right about landscape fabric. It's only a short-term fix for weeds (no better than mulch alone), and in the final analysis you'll wish you'd never laid eyes on the stuff because it creates so many brand new landscaping problems that are even worse than weeds. I really appreciate your evidence-based approach to teaching, thank you!
If you belong to Costco or Sams Club, you can get those large sheets of cardboard that they put between stacks of products FOR FREE!!!!!!!!!! I've been grabbing them for years for crafting, but now I'm going to use them in my yard!!!!!!!!! THANK YOU!!!!!!!!!
Wow! Two thumbs up! You’ve just explained what I needed the most! The fabric I used didn’t help, and now it creates another problems. The weeds growing no matter what and now I need to remove this fabric! I’ll use the eco friendly cardboard boxes instead! The business people don’t want us to know about this! Thank you a million! May God Bless you for sharing and saving the earth! 👍
Found your video because I am done with landscape fabric. Come to the conclusion that it is worthless and DOES create more problems. Well done video. Glad I found you.
Even 4 years ago, it's still beneficial to me and everyone. Save my time and money, was planning to buy the fabric, and now i change my mind. Gotta find lots of boxes! Thanks again sir.. Sub and like your videos instantly.. 👍🏻
Fantastic and perfect advice , I have just created a large bed and within days it began being covered in pesky weeds , you have saved the day , Thankyou !
I've "known" about using newspaper and cardboard for years, but I kinda forgot. I have a LOT of cardboard right now and was planning to recycle. Thanks for reminding me of a better way to "reduce, reuse, recycle" it. Two problems solved!
Tried this last year. Even with 6" overlap, the weeds 'found' their way through the crevices. This year was a nightmare to weed. All in all, good concept, but it only lasted a year. This year we weeded and remulched. Few suggestions. 1. Be sure to remove packaging tape and labels before laying the cardboard as they will find their way to the surface once the mulch settles. 2. Animals love running through it and you will find yourself reorganizing the mulch as it is pushed to the side revealing the cardboard. (I have two large dogs) 3. We allowed mother nature to water the cardboard although with a hilly landscape, you may wish to water to hold it in place and mold it around the area. The mulch tends to slide off the cardboard even modestly steep inclines. 4. Will try it again though....I read a comment below about brown paper rolls from the hardware store - clever! With consistent sheeting and large overlap, this should work better. We used various sized boxes and despite overlapping the spaces/flaps/etc, I can see how some weeds got through. Weeds are resilient and resourceful. So a large brown roll may be the solution - good suggestion!
@@Felicite-Etoile i would not - i would wet the paper to keep it down - if you put spikes (make holes) you are creating a space for the grass/weeds to work their way to the surface.
If you don't have enough cardboard for this, I've used the relatively inexpensive rolls of brown paper from the paint department at Lowes for this, and it works great. It's not as thick of a layer as cardboard, but it still works really well. It's also really easy to cut to whatever shape you need.
Wao.watched couple of vedios b4 this catched my eyes,how to kill weed.was about to go to buy fabric from costco around 31$ n then i was reading comments while listening n one person mentioned about pellet spills card boards...wallla....i can get as many card borads from my company for free.saved my $$,good for earth n problem solved. Every one lived happily thereafter💝💝💝thnx for evry1 for contributing here.
I got to the same conclusion a couple years back and it´s been a great solution: Cardboard + wood chips. But I live in México in a semidesert region, so I´ve kept some large areas without plants for two years now, and without weeds so far, even through the 2 months rainy seasons. I expect that at some point I'll need to replace the carboard, but it is still holding... A tip: I've got big sheets of carboard from Costco, Sams and such. They can give you some from fridges and big equipment if you ask nicely Just wanted to share the idea that it works for arid regions too and the joy of finding a fellow gardener that likes experimenting on his own. Cardboard rocks!!!!
You are a saint. I just went out and got fabric for my garden bed. This is my first home so I'm looking at all kinds of videos. You literally are amazing thank you
We found full strength vinegar and some mineral oil sprayed on the weeds and then cover it with black plastic to kill it out. Then we use organic preen, mulch and then add another layer of preen. Weeding is MUCH easier. Note: we have been using that same piece of plastic for five years and for all sorts of things.
Great advice. I used layers of newspapers several years ago to start a new flower bed. They said to lay it right on top of the grass in the fall and top with thick layer of wood chip mulch. The next spring it was perfect to plant flowers. I will definitely be using cardboard to use under shrubs and hedges then add my mulch. Thanks for this advice. I will be taking the fabric up and doing as you do.
I have been mulching my garden with newspaper for 50 years. I use 3-4 layers and top it with either leaves or straw. Then it is decomposed enough to til in in the spring. We have used landscape cloth in several other places and in all of them it is a big mess. I have never used cardboard but I will sure try it now. I love your video, too. You are a great teacher and I sure agree with you about the herbicides and wildlife.
Everything you said is ecologically 100% spot on. I have been a cardboard proponent for years, Use it for all my weed suppression. Multiple layers with free wood chips. Closely spaced perennials crowd out weeds - use up that vacuum. Plus worms love cardboard. Well done-well said.
Great video. I was never much of a gardener and really could use all the tips I can get. I really liked the ideas you presented here. I love the factor of working with and using nature rather than overpowering it. Thank you
What I noticed after watching a number of AlboPepper videos, is he is never in doubt. He states, this is the best way to do it and anyone that does it differently is wrong. Works for me!
Welcome to my channel Curtis. And thanks for watching! In many of my videos topics, I've already spent time testing the subject at hand. So there's less guess work since the results have already been observed. I know there might be multiple ways to achieve the same goal & I try to respect other people's choices. But on some options, I've definitely drawn a line in the sand. For example, using herbicides like Roundup is an absolute no-no. On this, I will NOT budge! :-D
My neighbor who did my yard last year put down black plastic on the ground to deter weed growth, but with all the rain there are giant weeds growing thru the plastic. I gave away my 2 weed eaters. Now I have to pull them out by hand, because I guess he is not doing my yard anymore, perhaps too many clients. So, this is good to know, I have some cardboard. Now, need some days off work to work on my yard. THANKS SO MUCH FOR THIS VIDEO!! ♥️👍
I love this video. The last little bit showed me I can put thick cardboard over low cut weeds and than apply mulch. I thought I might have to pull all of the weeds up first. Great! That is so do-able for this 67 year old lady!
Great idea for using card boards, they decompose over time and it doesn't cost anything; You can actually get them for free at some recycling centers and it's great for the environment. Thanks for sharing!
Cardboard and layers of newspaper with being mulched on top are an excellent way to control weeds and you can also plant on it too ! Grass clippings only bring more weeds !! Great job 🥰
You are SO right about that landscape fabric! I bought a house with a nice big flower garden. But when I went to plant my plants weed fabric was below the soil! I had to literally cut it out with a serrated knife tool Just to plant. I didn’t have the time to dig it all up. It was just like you said. Weeds grew on top like crazy. I would never use the stuff! I have used cardboard before & it works much better & is better for the soil because it eventually becomes soil too. First time viewer.
Very informative, thank you! Cardboard, newspaper and contractor paper also called painters paper are all great organic choices which work well in controlling unwanted weeds and grasses. There are critics who will tell you that cardboard in the garden is a bad idea because chemicals used in the production are bad for the environment. Production of cardboard in the USA is strictly regulated and no harmful chemicals are used. Something I learned is that every box has a stamp at the bottom showing the country of production, look for the stamp and if it says USA it is save to use in your garden.
I've done this with great results in my garden beds. I try to use double wall brown corrugated, without too much print if possible. I prepare my beds in late winter, early spring then throw down the boxes and then a good inch or two of new top soil. Let it marinate for a month or so and when the starts are ready to go in, just punch down through the corrugated with a hand shovel. It should be pretty soft after a few rains (or 6 straight weeks of rain if you're in Oregon like me!).
Thank you for reafferming what I've been doing all along: using cardboard. I'm on a corner lot and have a big yard to take care of that is overwhelming. I thought people will think I'm crazy so I'm doing carboarding small areas at a time. Using cardboard is the way to go for me!
Thank you. This video was very timely for me. I’m helping to recover numerous neglected flower beds, and we have over a hundred units in the building. That makes for a whole lot of cardboard. 😁
I have been doing cardboard for about three years and I did not have to weed all summer long and the cardboard Dissipated within the second year I had absolutely no waiting my soil was wonderful from the cardboard. It really does work
VERY WELL PRESENTED... THANK YOU!!! We're looking at some cost effective ways to redo our front yard and minimizing water usage as part of our strategy. I was about to purchase some (expensive) ground cover fabric, but your suggestion about using cardboard is a great idea for the reason's that you and others have explained... AND, BECAUSE WE HAVE SO MANY DELIVERIES COME IN FROM AMAZON THAT I SPEND AT LEAST 1/2 HOUR EVERY WEEK TEARING UP CARDBOARD BOXES SO THEY'LL FIT IN OUR RECYCLE CAN!!! HALLELUJAH! I'VE BEEN SAVED... AND IT DIDN'T COST ME A DIME!!!
Thanks for your video. I've actually been dealing with a huge garden that I can't weed alone. It just feels like an endless chore and not what gardening is supposed to be for me. I appreciate your video so much. It made sense and I like your voice and delivery. Very relaxing. 😊👍 I noticed at the end that you don't even weed the area. You just put the cardboard right on top of it. Amazing! Just wanted to make sure that it's all I have to do. Thanks!
First of all, thank you so much for the great video. I live in North Carolina, and when I first moved into my house, I did use landscape fabric and covered it with mulch. The problem was, it created termite infestation in my garage. So, I think our idea of cardboard (which I've used before) is a great idea. However, I think, this time, I'll cover the cardboard with river rock or pebbles.
Thanks for sharing your experience. Check the bottom of this page form tips about termites: albopepper.com/landscape-fabric-vs-sheet-mulching.php Also, there is a link to a pdf which is an entire manual on the topic!
I had a hill that was difficult to mow so I tore out the grass, added topsoil and planted perennials I already had, Autumn Joy Sedum, Hydrangeas, Hostas, Buttercups, Spiderwort, Hardy Geraniums, and more, by transplanting and dividing them. I used creeping buttercups, ground cover sedum, and ajuga in between because of the amount of shade I have in my yard and then mulched my first year with grass clippings to keep weeds at bay and grass from growing back in. This worked great and I don't have to mulch anymore and a trip through the garden once a week to pull some stray weeds that found a spot is all I need to do. No landscape fabric and no mulch to buy every year. Thank you for proposing landscape fabric not being the solution. It makes it difficult to plant new plants and for plants to seed and thrive except for the weeds. Now half of my back yard has perennials blooming from snow to snow, almost weed free, and I live in Michigan.
Mulching with grass clippings? I had not thought of that. It doesn't wind up including some grass seed and getting you grass where you don't want it? BTW, I'm in Michigan also. :-)
On my driveway in the center i had all weed growing. I parked my vehicle on that spot for 2 years and when they removed the vehicle the area was bare with no weeds and my assumption is when you prevent the sun raze from hitting a certain area the roots die and there is no more sign of weed, even a plastic type of fabric such as heavy duty construction bag to cover the area and prevent growth, it really works and no weeds growing.
Most post offices also. My small local po gets 1 Amazon tote delivered everyday. It's 4x4x6' and already mostly cleaned except for some easily removed labels. Larger offices probably get more.
Cardboard and layered newspapers is definitely better than landscape fabric but you need to soak them in water first, in order to follow contours and to avoid the woodchips falling off it.
@@wendym5086 I wouldn't use small rocks either, such a pain to remove and weeds still easily creep out, and I am speaking from experience. Big rocks would be better.
Brilliant video mate 👏 . So simply explained that even the most novice gardeners will be able to understand the horticultural reasons of why you would take this approach. Very well done 👍
once a week I go to the local thrift store and gladly take their boxes. In the winter I take them to the recycle center, during gardening time, I sort through them, saving up the ones that have no color, and little tape for gardening. It gives me free stuff, and saves them paying to have them hauled away. Win, win!!
I have used cardboard in this way and it works great! I didn't know it was an actual technique I was just trying to avoid herbicides to save the fruit trees from possible exposure! My (disabled)mother's whole backyard, roughly 2000sqft was ALL WEED a literal SEA of mainly mallow(thankfully). I tied rope to a wood plank(for holding) and stomped it all down, applied cardboard and woodchips and it did wonders. The yard was literally unwalkable and now you can actually see the trees and back wall 😄 mallow is a great little(BIG once full grown!!) plant but I prefer to observe it while hiking only. I also just put down fabric today roughly 70sqft but I plan on putting gravel over it to reduce the maintenance my mom has to up keep and then cutting into it in the future to plant some accent bushes. Landscape fabric has it's uses too. Cheers!
That creeping Thyme looks gorgeous . You have inspired me to buy one . Also , cardboard boxes is a top idea for a mulch underlay . I've been using newspapers but now I'll use both . Good on you .
Quincidencly I just finished pulling weeds out of my mulch. This is brilliant. Tomorrow I put down cardboard. Voila. No more weed pulling and empty out garage from old boxes. Thank you. Timing is everything. ❤
Exactly the problem I had, not only I had roots growing on top of the sheet and the "top soil" but some genetically advanced weeds managed to penetrate through heavy thick plastic sheets... More work for me in the end. Finally took it all up.
A GREAT place for LARGE THICK pieces of cardboard is your "BIG BOX Stores and Grocery Stores"... They call them PALLET SLIPS. It creates a protective barrier between the Pallet and the Product. And, if you go into the store (relatively early 7-9am) and ask the Manager or Receiving Clerk NICELY, you can obtain as many of these as they have on hand! BONUS... And this Cardboard is the Recyclable "Dull" stuff without Tape or any "Shiny Finish" that will not properly biodegrade! Thanks for sharing this video with EVERYONE! Take care and Happy Easter, 🤓-Thomas Washington State
Just a heads up. I worked floral in a large grocery chain and we were not allowed to save anything for customers or give anything away. All cardboard was baled and sent out for money to the chain. The other reason was no room to store anything. Grocery chains work on the in and out basis every day. No place is designated as a save for anyone area for anything. Now a one owner or small local chain may. Or a single owner florist shop.
Slip sheets are going to be hit or miss. We need them in order to make the bales. So if the store is low they wont give any up. So availability will fluctuate.
Thanks for posting this! I realized as a new home owner that traditional methods of wood chips and rock beds are a PAIN! I’ve mostly left dirt and filled with plants. But recently had and issue under my tree with maple saplings taking over. I am going to use this method to kill them without hand weeding and without chemicals! (I use this method in my vegetable boxes but hadn’t thought to use it in my flower beds!) thanks!
I put down some weed fabric and lots of mulch it worked well, but after a few years the weeds were growing in and it grew through the fabric as well, I had to dig it all out, I need something else. Thanks this video answered my dilemma.
Wow! Awesome! I recently moved into a new home. Previous owners were not gardeners si it was landscape fabric and mulch, with a few plants! Being 65, and a Gardener, I was looking for way more plants and less grass! I have employed everything you talk about here and even though it will take some time, I am on my way! Keep up the good work
Great low key presentation. I subscribed. I prefer newspapers to cardboard. In my area ( heavy rain-zone 7) grasses are the problem. They are hard or impossible to simply pull out. It takes hours with a soil knife. You've motivated me to get out there and refresh my rose beds. 👍
I wish more people knew this. So many people really believe they won't have weeds if they put the fabric down under the mulch. It just makes it harder to weed.
Lol, remember though that in actual landscape beds it's about more than just cardboard. Filling in empty spaces with perennial plantings, including ground covers, is part of the long-term strategy.
You are awesome. Don't have a green thumb at all, I'm stuck with a bare landscaping, after being promised help. But it may not happen til next year. So I am trying to get the project started by myself, and been on you tube trying to get ideas on where I can start. Your video is so far the most "awesome" as I have been weeding the few days using herbicides. Thank you very much, it does make sense, and we all need to do our part, to save the earth.
First of all - Awesome mustache I am here because I was seeking a way to curb weeds without all the outdated methods I was told to use to curb weeds (the round up, the weed barrier). I moved into an old home that was "professionally" landscaped (in other words, thrown together as quickly as possible with all the focus only on aesthetics) and I am in the process of removing pounds of weed barrier!! I think it is felt material- thick and fibrous, terrible! So hard to cut! Everything you describe in your video that becomes an obstacle is exactly what is going on in my yard! All my trees were sick, I consulted with an arborist to see if they needed to be chopped down :( Luckily he informed me ( just as you mention in your vid) the barrier was suffocating the roots and also preventing the tree from thriving (trees can shed to provide warmth in cooler months and keep moisture in during dryer months) Also, I did not even think about the worms! This was a great vid!
I’m going through the same thing! He also had 8” of moldy mulch that I had to have removed! I’m just now, after a year, getting things back to normal. 🙏☀️
Please watch Permculture teachers: Morag Gamble and Geoff Lawton"; I use their method of weed control by using wet layered cardboard in an overlapping fashion. I soak the ground first, cut the top of the weeds and leave them in place on the top of the soil for the worms, put the cardboard down, dnd woodchips on top. Make sure there are no gaps where light gets in and allow weeds to grow. Done! I have had no weeds for two years.😀
This is a great video! I also had experience with wood mulch turning into compost and the fabric being a barrier and weeds growing in it. Will consider the cardboard idea. One issue with wood mulch is when it is blown it goes away and need to replace.
That was a great deal of very valuable information. Thank you for educating us on how to have a beautiful, weed-free yard without harming the environment, soil organisms or our own bodies!
The trouble is, newspaper is a lot harder to come by these days. It's not so endemic at it once was. So the quantities needed to mulch with can be difficult to come by.
Get a large roll of brown paper like you see at a furniture store or deli and use that as a weed barrier. I like this because it doesn't have ink or any other contaminants. Great video.
Add thick layers of news paper that is damp then layer with last year's composted leaves, compost and then mulch. Thus is, the eaence of lasagna gardening.
@wendef ung Yes too thin. I wouldnt use it. Think WORMS. put down newspapers corrugated cardboard, all the layers you want of that. The worms eat it and return to the soil their black gold as plant food.
Never thought about the worms. Good point. I had a small raised box and I used a metal fencing with a layer of fabric on it and I still had the weeds eventually. My mother used simple newspaper weighed down with rocks and covered with mulch. She grew organically and had a green thumb for sure. Now I retired and have more time...I think Ill try it her way...too simple and breaks down at the end of the season over the winter. Now if that would only take care of the horribly invasive bush roots that take over everything...lol.
It is so true what you said about all this stuff! The best I experienced about this content is to put CLUMP-LIKE-GROWING Perennials together (with enough place to grow properly, best work so called self-cleaning plants, which need not much care) and maybe here an there some groundcoverplants(but be sure that they matches with the perennials inside the bed!!) e.g: if you put evergreens in it, be sure that there is nothing in competition to them, and be sure that other plant in it are pretty well static, like boxwood, spireas, feathergrass (important: always clump-like-growing grasses!!), pulp-plants which can come up through in spring, etc. All Plants in beighbourhood must have the some growing-strenght, the same light, and - most important - the same need for water!! If you consider these things I can give you a suceed warranty. Enjoy! :-)
Fantastic idea 💡 I used the fabric in April & now the weeds are coming through in September 😩 I have lots of removal boxes in my shed. I’ll be doing this tomorrow 😅 thanks for sharing.
Truth! We just weeded a large bed on the side of our house. Landscape fabric was put down several years ago with mulch on top. The weeds were putting roots down through the fabric. I also had to get a knife to split the fabric to plant bulbs. I'm going to go back and cut out sections at a time because I hate it lol.
FYI: I decided to renovate and extend a 3' boarder on the perimeter of my property. Immediately I discovered a very heavy fabric covering every square foot that must have been 20 years old. I quickly deduced the best way to remove the unwanted fabric was to use a reciprocating saw with a fine blade to cut through sod and fabric simultaneously. Not fun, but fast. Good luck
Tks very much for your video; one of the best ones i've watched and high quality HD !! You seem really passionated about using organic, bio-degradeable materials to block out weeds. Tks for ur video and that stopped me wasting time buying more landscape fabric. Keep up the good work.
Wow!!!! I just left Lowes and spent $50 on landscape fabric. Geez. Thanks for the information. It's a big learning curve. I should have made a renovation planner before this project. New subscriber here!
This is absolutely the best video breaking down pro and cons of landscape fabric and providing brilliant alternatives. I’m definitely subscribing to this channel! Thanks for the good info!
Excelllllllllent idea! I LOVE the look of flowers and grass bunched together and it NEVER occurred to me to use that design and other ground covers to “weed out” the weeds! 🙌 Thanks for the great video!!
I AGREE !! Great video, I recently moved and my new place has landscape in front/back, that desperately need help! since, I'm on a budget, this is perfect ! I recently bought 5 bags for $10 of Mulch, I can use some in the front/back, I always take a before/after picture for family and friends. I'm also going to use tires for décor. thanks again for sharing.. I really appreciate you, I'm a Single 55 yr. woman on a budget. Educating myself to do different projects around the house.
Grateful for this video! I live in Brazil and I started using the "no dig" method a short time ago, precisely in a place where it rains A LOT, up to 3 meters a year. It's nice to plant in Cubatão, you just stick stakes in the ground and then take root. It's tropical climate, plants grow wildly. But if the cardboard pieces are too big, the rain drags the mulching!... I ended up preferring smaller pieces, with more overlap. The water soon finds an outlet and the roots too, it's been working very well. I learned later that they call it "the lasagna garden"... A big hug, from Brazil. And... GET OUT BOLSONARO, let's uproot this guy like the weed he is.
I have used cardboard in the past, works well. Big box stores are a great source. Be aware that you will need to separate things out such as waxed boxes and too small boxes. Though the small boxes can be useful to help cover slits in the underlying cardboard. Talk to a manager ahead of time, and if they are agreeable, find a friend with a truck!
I used the landscape sheeting on a large, long bank years ago. Lesson learned. What a mess I created. I use cardboard now. Except in my back 1/4 acre fenced in yard. My large dogs think the cardboard is for digging up and shaking around. Everywhere else, its use has created a nice earthworm laden, rich soil that my perennials and boxwoods love.
I have been fighting bindweed in one of my flower beds for many years!!! Bindweed is very viney like morning glory. I have literally spent so many hours of my life trying to pull it up. It is a constant battle. The names I have called this weed while pulling it out are not very nice! 😂 I am going to get my boxes out of the recycling bin later today. Once my maple tree drops it’s whirly gigs, I’m putting down cardboard and topping it with mulch! Thanks for the great idea!!!
I use cardboard and it was suggested to me to get the cardboard wet first to make large pieces easier to lay down, or stay down if it's a windy day. I hose them down, or I lay them in place while it's raining (a rainy day is also the best kind of day to weed!). You don't *need* to do this, but if you're finding the process clumsy, get them wet first and see if it helps you. Definitely pay attention to taking off the labels and tape! Many mailing labels contain BPA (as well as register receipt tape). Removing the inorganic parts off your boxes keeps the nasty out of your soil biome.
Thank you so very much for sharing this advice. I’ve got a small yard but has very bad weeds (and my neighbours don’t bother with maintaining their yards much). This will save me both money and physical back ache pulling weeds! I’m not very knowledgable about gardening, but am hoping to learn, and so want to thank you for the advice about which plants work well - I want to do what I can to help the environment and our bees. Thanks again :)
OMG, I’m so glad I watched your video, I just bought a roll of landscape fabric today hoping to rid my fairy garden of weeds. I work at a place that throws away tons of cardboard everyday, I can get that free 😄😄 thanks so much for this video 😊
You are so RIGHT!!! Landscaping fabric becomes a mess. I saved all my Amazon and delivery boxes for a year. I had boxes taken up the place. I broke them down and put them in leaf and garden bags. I used plastic. I like plastic because it locks in moisture. The plants I did with Plastic did better than the plants with cardboard, but the mulch breaks down on the plastic too and weeds grow, So ultimatley the cardboard is the best. Because it changes over the soil and makes it better after it breaks down
I really appreciate you taking a non-glyphosate approach. My daughter has leukemia, she was diagnosed at age 4. I don’t usually comment but I wanted to thank you for other options to this cancer-causing chemical!
Thanks for sharing that personal expression Tierney! I'm sorry to hear that she's battling that. But I'm glad to hear she has such a loving and caring Mom. I wish you and your family all the best! Certainly avoiding pesticide and herbicide exposure is a good strategy for ALL of us!!
Sending you love and prayer that your daughter makes a full recovery and leads a long healthy life
Love to you and your daughter from Pennsylvania. (USA) You ,your daughter ,and loved ones are going through alot.
I never heard of this.Cool
Awww, that's terrible! How is she doing? I get nervous of people using it, my in-laws have so much property to keep up, they won't do anything else on their fence lines. I guess it is what it is bit I'm not a fan of it.
I’m sorry, I have the sister blood cancer, multiple myeloma.
I appreciate how your use of subtle verbage to instruct all while describing your reasoning intellectually.
Saying phrases like "consider this" vs. "do this"
It's a very calming effect contrary to being preached at
Thanks Alan! I appreciate your feedback. :)
true...I too liked his way of expression...
My mind is blown! I just bought $50 worth of fabric that I intend to return after watching this video. Very insightful and educational. Thanks!
Thank-you for watching. I'm glad you found the information useful! xD
Trumpetto31 newspapers work also
Just make grow bags out of the fabric roll.
MY MAN!! I’m going to get a lot of cardboard tomorrow 👍🏾
Same story.saved my $$
Started using cardboard 3 years ago...best decision ever! My sister owns a liquor store so getting boxes is no problem! Landscape looks great and am now using my extra time expanding my garden. .
How deep does the cardboard need to be buried?
So in the past 3 yrs where the cardboard lies. Do you have less weeds or none?
Is it slippery? We need to put something down but we are covering it with pinestraw
Excellent video- just the info I needed. Thanks a BUNCH. Here's a suggestion for you as "payback" since I am an HVAC guy. Use some form of protection around your heat pump unit to prevent the plants from interfering with air flow towards the unit. One option might be plastic construction fencing. The idea is to prevent the plants from obstructing airflow to or from the unit. If airflow is obstructed, the system becomes less efficient and therefore energy costs increase. Additionally, the plants can potentially cause mechanical problems and/or accelerated corrosion of the unit. There should be at least 6 inches of clearance around the unit where no obstructions exist. Consult your owners manual to verify. Thanks again!
Thanks for the info
Quick question...do I still need weed the area before I install the cardboard or can I just put it over top?
Update. Been using this cardboard method for two seasons...Absolutely wonderful. It works brilliantly. Thanks again!
I found your video last spring. Yes i tried the card board. I dont know how to post my photo to show everyone it really works. I am so pleased with the results 1 yr later. Im now doing this technique in the front bed. Thank you
Do you just put the cardboard down over the weeds? Or weed it first?
Hello from the UK!! I have used this technique last spring to create a new flower border and it works brilliantly. The cardboard is no longer visible and the border has had hardly any weeds for a year. Your video explains it so perfectly!! Like the planting too, very subtle !!
You are so right about landscape fabric. It's only a short-term fix for weeds (no better than mulch alone), and in the final analysis you'll wish you'd never laid eyes on the stuff because it creates so many brand new landscaping problems that are even worse than weeds. I really appreciate your evidence-based approach to teaching, thank you!
If you belong to Costco or Sams Club, you can get those large sheets of cardboard that they put between stacks of products FOR FREE!!!!!!!!!! I've been grabbing them for years for crafting, but now I'm going to use them in my yard!!!!!!!!! THANK YOU!!!!!!!!!
Costco! I never thought of that!
I have an area where the grass has started overtaking the flowerbed. Can I cover the area with cardboard and mulch and regain the flowerbed?
I get them all the time.
So who do you ask to get them? You go inside or just go straight to the dumpsters?
Wow! Two thumbs up! You’ve just explained what I needed the most! The fabric I used didn’t help, and now it creates another problems. The weeds growing no matter what and now I need to remove this fabric! I’ll use the eco friendly cardboard boxes instead! The business people don’t want us to know about this! Thank you a million! May God Bless you for sharing and saving the earth! 👍
@Nettie Reynolds you need to ask yourself what am I going to have after the cardboard rots away?
Found your video because I am done with landscape fabric. Come to the conclusion that it is worthless and DOES create more problems. Well done video. Glad I found you.
Even 4 years ago, it's still beneficial to me and everyone. Save my time and money, was planning to buy the fabric, and now i change my mind. Gotta find lots of boxes! Thanks again sir.. Sub and like your videos instantly.. 👍🏻
You have a gentle voice and I value your information. Thank you
Thanks for watching! :)
Fantastic and perfect advice , I have just created a large bed and within days it began being covered in pesky weeds , you have saved the day , Thankyou !
I've "known" about using newspaper and cardboard for years, but I kinda forgot. I have a LOT of cardboard right now and was planning to recycle. Thanks for reminding me of a better way to "reduce, reuse, recycle" it. Two problems solved!
I have done this for years. It breaks down slowly and it works. You are right.
Great info! I especially like that you don't have to pull out the weeds before laying down the cardboard - just put it right on top of the weeds 🌸
Trying this today thanks.
Tried this last year. Even with 6" overlap, the weeds 'found' their way through the crevices. This year was a nightmare to weed. All in all, good concept, but it only lasted a year. This year we weeded and remulched. Few suggestions.
1. Be sure to remove packaging tape and labels before laying the cardboard as they will find their way to the surface once the mulch settles.
2. Animals love running through it and you will find yourself reorganizing the mulch as it is pushed to the side revealing the cardboard. (I have two large dogs)
3. We allowed mother nature to water the cardboard although with a hilly landscape, you may wish to water to hold it in place and mold it around the area. The mulch tends to slide off the cardboard even modestly steep inclines.
4. Will try it again though....I read a comment below about brown paper rolls from the hardware store - clever! With consistent sheeting and large overlap, this should work better. We used various sized boxes and despite overlapping the spaces/flaps/etc, I can see how some weeds got through. Weeds are resilient and resourceful. So a large brown roll may be the solution - good suggestion!
Thank you
Do we put spikes through the brown paper?
@@Felicite-Etoile i would not - i would wet the paper to keep it down - if you put spikes (make holes) you are creating a space for the grass/weeds to work their way to the surface.
I heard newspaper was a good alternative.
A few heavy rocks on the edges can hold the barrier down.
If you don't have enough cardboard for this, I've used the relatively inexpensive rolls of brown paper from the paint department at Lowes for this, and it works great. It's not as thick of a layer as cardboard, but it still works really well. It's also really easy to cut to whatever shape you need.
Best if you use multiple overlapping layers. Tough plants can get through a single layer!
Do you have to wet it first?
@@EyeWYT 🥺
Multiple layers of newspaper works too
@@papabear149 Where you going with this Papa? 🤣🤣
I don't know , if you know,...but you are a great teacher too.
Great info brother, thank you.
Thank-you very much! I really appreciate it. xD
Wao.watched couple of vedios b4 this catched my eyes,how to kill weed.was about to go to buy fabric from costco around 31$ n then i was reading comments while listening n one person mentioned about pellet spills card boards...wallla....i can get as many card borads from my company for free.saved my $$,good for earth n problem solved. Every one lived happily thereafter💝💝💝thnx for evry1 for contributing here.
Whenever my boys are bad. I make them go out and pull up weeds. It’s a damn good way to burn up that extra energy.
Good for you for disciplining them! Just be sure to reward them with some tasty fruits from the garden when they're good! 🍓🍎🍅
🤣🤣🤣 what a great idea 💡
That’s what my dad did to us. I did the same, gave my son a market bag and set him out in the parkway.
Lol 😂 That’s a good one!! it’s also good
Workout.
Well, thats one excuse not to change and have to admit "thats just what my daddy did, and his daddy.."😅
I got to the same conclusion a couple years back and it´s been a great solution: Cardboard + wood chips. But I live in México in a semidesert region, so I´ve kept some large areas without plants for two years now, and without weeds so far, even through the 2 months rainy seasons. I expect that at some point I'll need to replace the carboard, but it is still holding...
A tip: I've got big sheets of carboard from Costco, Sams and such. They can give you some from fridges and big equipment if you ask nicely
Just wanted to share the idea that it works for arid regions too and the joy of finding a fellow gardener that likes experimenting on his own.
Cardboard rocks!!!!
You are a saint. I just went out and got fabric for my garden bed. This is my first home so I'm looking at all kinds of videos. You literally are amazing thank you
Very sensible commentary and video. I like, especially, that spraying herbicide is not the solution.
We found full strength vinegar and some mineral oil sprayed on the weeds and then cover it with black plastic to kill it out. Then we use organic preen, mulch and then add another layer of preen. Weeding is MUCH easier. Note: we have been using that same piece of plastic for five years and for all sorts of things.
Great advice. I used layers of newspapers several years ago to start a new flower bed. They said to lay it right on top of the grass in the fall and top with thick layer of wood chip mulch. The next spring it was perfect to plant flowers. I will definitely be using cardboard to use under shrubs and hedges then add my mulch. Thanks for this advice. I will be taking the fabric up and doing as you do.
This is the most intelligent, common sense, well thought out method I’ve seen yet. THANK YOU!!
I agree. Simple 'realistic expectations' and great results.
The methods used are awesome! Love doing this in my yard...
I have been mulching my garden with newspaper for 50 years. I use 3-4 layers and top it with either leaves or straw. Then it is decomposed enough to til in in the spring. We have used landscape cloth in several other places and in all of them it is a big mess. I have never used cardboard but I will sure try it now. I love your video, too. You are a great teacher and I sure agree with you about the herbicides and wildlife.
Everything you said is ecologically 100% spot on. I have been a cardboard proponent for years, Use it for all my weed suppression. Multiple layers with free wood chips. Closely spaced perennials crowd out weeds - use up that vacuum. Plus worms love cardboard. Well done-well said.
Great video. I was never much of a gardener and really could use all the tips I can get. I really liked the ideas you presented here. I love the factor of working with and using nature rather than overpowering it.
Thank you
What I noticed after watching a number of AlboPepper videos, is he is never in doubt. He states, this is the best way to do it and anyone that does it differently is wrong. Works for me!
Welcome to my channel Curtis. And thanks for watching! In many of my videos topics, I've already spent time testing the subject at hand. So there's less guess work since the results have already been observed. I know there might be multiple ways to achieve the same goal & I try to respect other people's choices. But on some options, I've definitely drawn a line in the sand. For example, using herbicides like Roundup is an absolute no-no. On this, I will NOT budge! :-D
we all tout what works best for us. i am a landscape idiot, so i watch & take away whatever i want to try. i like his teaching style!
It's a great and simple idea!!! I tried it ......excellets results and zero cost!!!! Thank you very much
I've used layers of cardboard to successfully to suffocate grass, when converting lawn to flower bed. Cover with pine needles or chips works great!
Adding landscape fabric was the worst landscaping decision I ever made. The weeds grow into the fabric and you can't pull them out. It's horrible.
Nutsedge grass + landscape fabric is AWFUL.
🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️🤦🏻♀️ that’s where I am right now ugh 😩
I had the same problem too, so I had it removed. I guess landscape fabric is only good as a underlayment for pavers, which I plan to use.
Same here... didn't work for us
Your soil needs 3 things water air And light Is landscape fabric denies it all of them
My neighbor who did my yard last year put down black plastic on the ground to deter weed growth, but with all the rain there are giant weeds growing thru the plastic. I gave away my 2 weed eaters. Now I have to pull them out by hand, because I guess he is not doing my yard anymore, perhaps too many clients. So, this is good to know, I have some cardboard. Now, need some days off work to work on my yard. THANKS SO MUCH FOR THIS VIDEO!! ♥️👍
P.S. I hate Roundup.
Will this surprise invasive trumpet vines and wild acacias??
Suppress!!
I love this video. The last little bit showed me I can put thick cardboard over low cut weeds and than apply mulch.
I thought I might have to pull all of the weeds up first. Great! That is so do-able for this 67 year old lady!
Amen!!!
Yep me too at 70yrs young what a great idea 💡
Tess Jones Yup me too. I’m at the far side of 70 and weeding is very difficult. Love this idea!
Tess Jones, I don't have to pull weeds first?
Hope this works for those wild violets. I have been digging the croms up. Got billions taking over. Im 66 an shoveling them out kills me.
Great idea for using card boards, they decompose over time and it doesn't cost anything; You can actually get them for free at some recycling centers and it's great for the environment. Thanks for sharing!
Cardboard and layers of newspaper with being mulched on top are an excellent way to control weeds and you can also plant on it too ! Grass clippings only bring more weeds !! Great job 🥰
You are SO right about that landscape fabric! I bought a house with a nice big flower garden.
But when I went to plant my plants weed fabric was below the soil! I had to literally cut it out with a serrated knife tool
Just to plant. I didn’t have the time to dig it all up. It was just like you said. Weeds grew on top like crazy. I would never use the stuff!
I have used cardboard before & it works much better & is better for the soil because it eventually becomes soil too. First time viewer.
Very informative, thank you! Cardboard, newspaper and contractor paper also called painters paper are all great organic choices which work well in controlling unwanted weeds and grasses. There are critics who will tell you that cardboard in the garden is a bad idea because chemicals used in the production are bad for the environment. Production of cardboard in the USA is strictly regulated and no harmful chemicals are used. Something I learned is that every box has a stamp at the bottom showing the country of production, look for the stamp and if it says USA it is save to use in your garden.
I've done this with great results in my garden beds. I try to use double wall brown corrugated, without too much print if possible. I prepare my beds in late winter, early spring then throw down the boxes and then a good inch or two of new top soil. Let it marinate for a month or so and when the starts are ready to go in, just punch down through the corrugated with a hand shovel. It should be pretty soft after a few rains (or 6 straight weeks of rain if you're in Oregon like me!).
No mulch on top?
Explain pls
Thank you for reafferming what I've been doing all along: using cardboard. I'm on a corner lot and have a big yard to take care of that is overwhelming. I thought people will think I'm crazy so I'm doing carboarding small areas at a time. Using cardboard is the way to go for me!
Try to avoid worrying "about what people think". It's YOUR landscape. Enjoy...
My Comment was a reply to yours, Marisa...Peace!
Thank you. This video was very timely for me. I’m helping to recover numerous neglected flower beds, and we have over a hundred units in the building. That makes for a whole lot of cardboard. 😁
I have been doing cardboard for about three years and I did not have to weed all summer long and the cardboard Dissipated within the second year I had absolutely no waiting my soil was wonderful from the cardboard. It really does work
VERY WELL PRESENTED... THANK YOU!!! We're looking at some cost effective ways to redo our front yard and minimizing water usage as part of our strategy. I was about to purchase some (expensive) ground cover fabric, but your suggestion about using cardboard is a great idea for the reason's that you and others have explained... AND, BECAUSE WE HAVE SO MANY DELIVERIES COME IN FROM AMAZON THAT I SPEND AT LEAST 1/2 HOUR EVERY WEEK TEARING UP CARDBOARD BOXES SO THEY'LL FIT IN OUR RECYCLE CAN!!! HALLELUJAH! I'VE BEEN SAVED... AND IT DIDN'T COST ME A DIME!!!
Thanks for your video. I've actually been dealing with a huge garden that I can't weed alone. It just feels like an endless chore and not what gardening is supposed to be for me. I appreciate your video so much. It made sense and I like your voice and delivery. Very relaxing. 😊👍 I noticed at the end that you don't even weed the area. You just put the cardboard right on top of it. Amazing! Just wanted to make sure that it's all I have to do. Thanks!
snowykys we had the same problem but noticed that after applying calcium to the garden, we had fewer weeds.
Been using cardboard for years. Found out a long time ago that I did not like landscape fabric. Thanks for the video!
I use cheap galvanized landscape staples ($20 for 500) to tack down the cardboard. Really helps keep the overlap zones from growing weeds.
That would be really helpful on an allotment while you're waiting for your compost to be rotted down enough:)
where do you get that many for $20?
What is a landscape staple. I’m a new home owner and know nothing about yard work.
Good suggestion! I’ve been whittling branches into stakes, and using these like tacks to secure overlapping sheets of cardboard.
First of all, thank you so much for the great video. I live in North Carolina, and when I first moved into my house, I did use landscape fabric and covered it with mulch. The problem was, it created termite infestation in my garage. So, I think our idea of cardboard (which I've used before) is a great idea. However, I think, this time, I'll cover the cardboard with river rock or pebbles.
Thanks for sharing your experience. Check the bottom of this page form tips about termites: albopepper.com/landscape-fabric-vs-sheet-mulching.php Also, there is a link to a pdf which is an entire manual on the topic!
I had a hill that was difficult to mow so I tore out the grass, added topsoil and planted perennials I already had, Autumn Joy Sedum, Hydrangeas, Hostas, Buttercups, Spiderwort, Hardy Geraniums, and more, by transplanting and dividing them. I used creeping buttercups, ground cover sedum, and ajuga in between because of the amount of shade I have in my yard and then mulched my first year with grass clippings to keep weeds at bay and grass from growing back in. This worked great and I don't have to mulch anymore and a trip through the garden once a week to pull some stray weeds that found a spot is all I need to do. No landscape fabric and no mulch to buy every year. Thank you for proposing landscape fabric not being the solution. It makes it difficult to plant new plants and for plants to seed and thrive except for the weeds. Now half of my back yard has perennials blooming from snow to snow, almost weed free, and I live in Michigan.
Mulching with grass clippings? I had not thought of that. It doesn't wind up including some grass seed and getting you grass where you don't want it? BTW, I'm in Michigan also. :-)
On my driveway in the center i had all weed growing. I parked my vehicle on that spot for 2 years and when they removed the vehicle the area was bare with no weeds and my assumption is when you prevent the sun raze from hitting a certain area the roots die and there is no more sign of weed, even a plastic type of fabric such as heavy duty construction bag to cover the area and prevent growth, it really works and no weeds growing.
Write a book Candace. Your comment showed amazing and holistic problem solving skills. I've done the same thing. In my neck of the woods.🍀
@@juans3728 p
I found mattress stores have large clean cardboard, think king size bed, and most are happy to have some one take them away.
Great tip, thank you!
Most post offices also. My small local po gets 1 Amazon tote delivered everyday. It's 4x4x6' and already mostly cleaned except for some easily removed labels. Larger offices probably get more.
Cardboard and layered newspapers is definitely better than landscape fabric but you need to soak them in water first, in order to follow contours and to avoid the woodchips falling off it.
Thanks for the tip
Thanks
Instead of mulch can you just put stones if you want that effect?
@@wendym5086 I wouldn’t use the small gravel.
@@wendym5086 I wouldn't use small rocks either, such a pain to remove and weeds still easily creep out, and I am speaking from experience. Big rocks would be better.
This video is great. Finally a video that makes perfect sense and doesn't candy code everything. Thank you for that.
Brilliant video mate 👏 . So simply explained that even the most novice gardeners will be able to understand the horticultural reasons of why you would take this approach. Very well done 👍
once a week I go to the local thrift store and gladly take their boxes. In the winter I take them to the recycle center, during gardening time, I sort through them, saving up the ones that have no color, and little tape for gardening. It gives me free stuff, and saves them paying to have them hauled away. Win, win!!
I have used cardboard in this way and it works great! I didn't know it was an actual technique I was just trying to avoid herbicides to save the fruit trees from possible exposure! My (disabled)mother's whole backyard, roughly 2000sqft was ALL WEED a literal SEA of mainly mallow(thankfully). I tied rope to a wood plank(for holding) and stomped it all down, applied cardboard and woodchips and it did wonders. The yard was literally unwalkable and now you can actually see the trees and back wall 😄 mallow is a great little(BIG once full grown!!) plant but I prefer to observe it while hiking only. I also just put down fabric today roughly 70sqft but I plan on putting gravel over it to reduce the maintenance my mom has to up keep and then cutting into it in the future to plant some accent bushes. Landscape fabric has it's uses too. Cheers!
Wow! Thank you for sharing. I didn’t know the cons of using the weed fabric 😕
Now, I will use the cardboard instead!
That creeping Thyme looks gorgeous . You have inspired me to buy one . Also , cardboard boxes is a top idea for a mulch underlay . I've been using newspapers but now I'll use both . Good on you .
Quincidencly I just finished pulling weeds out of my mulch. This is brilliant. Tomorrow I put down cardboard. Voila. No more weed pulling and empty out garage from old boxes. Thank you. Timing is everything. ❤
Exactly the problem I had, not only I had roots growing on top of the sheet and the "top soil" but some genetically advanced weeds managed to penetrate through heavy thick plastic sheets... More work for me in the end. Finally took it all up.
That happened to me. I am saving my cardboard. Hoarding boxes!
A GREAT place for LARGE THICK pieces of cardboard is your "BIG BOX Stores and Grocery Stores"...
They call them PALLET SLIPS. It creates a protective barrier between the Pallet and the Product. And, if you go into the store (relatively early 7-9am) and ask the Manager or Receiving Clerk NICELY, you can obtain as many of these as they have on hand!
BONUS... And this Cardboard is the Recyclable "Dull" stuff without Tape or any "Shiny Finish" that will not properly biodegrade!
Thanks for sharing this video with EVERYONE!
Take care and Happy Easter,
🤓-Thomas
Washington State
Thnx for ur tip..awsome
Just a heads up. I worked floral in a large grocery chain and we were not allowed to save anything for customers or give anything away. All cardboard was baled and sent out for money to the chain. The other reason was no room to store anything. Grocery chains work on the in and out basis every day. No place is designated as a save for anyone area for anything. Now a one owner or small local chain may. Or a single owner florist shop.
Slip sheets are going to be hit or miss. We need them in order to make the bales. So if the store is low they wont give any up. So availability will fluctuate.
Thanks for posting this! I realized as a new home owner that traditional methods of wood chips and rock beds are a PAIN! I’ve mostly left dirt and filled with plants. But recently had and issue under my tree with maple saplings taking over. I am going to use this method to kill them without hand weeding and without chemicals! (I use this method in my vegetable boxes but hadn’t thought to use it in my flower beds!) thanks!
I put down some weed fabric and lots of mulch it worked well, but after a few years the weeds were growing in and it grew through the fabric as well, I had to dig it all out, I need something else. Thanks this video answered my dilemma.
Wow! Awesome! I recently moved into a new home. Previous owners were not gardeners si it was landscape fabric and mulch, with a few plants! Being 65, and a Gardener, I was looking for way more plants and less grass! I have employed everything you talk about here and even though it will take some time, I am on my way! Keep up the good work
Great low key presentation. I subscribed. I prefer newspapers to cardboard. In my area ( heavy rain-zone 7) grasses are the problem. They are hard or impossible to simply pull out. It takes hours with a soil knife. You've motivated me to get out there and refresh my rose beds. 👍
I wish more people knew this. So many people really believe they won't have weeds if they put the fabric down under the mulch. It just makes it harder to weed.
I’m glad I found this. This will be much easier for me. I like to research my projects extensively. It always pays off. Thanks.
I watched the whole thing just to hear you say CARDBOARD. I wrote three Lasagna Gardening books on the subject and you said all the right things.
Lol, remember though that in actual landscape beds it's about more than just cardboard. Filling in empty spaces with perennial plantings, including ground covers, is part of the long-term strategy.
You are awesome. Don't have a green thumb at all, I'm stuck with a bare landscaping, after being promised help. But it may not happen til next year. So I am trying to get the project started by myself, and been on you tube trying to get ideas on where I can start. Your video is so far the most "awesome" as I have been weeding the few days using herbicides. Thank you very much, it does make sense, and we all need to do our part, to save the earth.
Should tell people that don’t know the cardboard is FOOD for worms to eat and add compost to your soil.
I have used cardboard for years. No weeds!
It’s free, sterile and ABUNDANT
I have a tub of worms for fishing. They eat newspaper & cardboard. Every once in a while I give them an apple too.
What about fire ants will the live under the cardboard??
I also have root knot nemetoades I hoped to kill them with black plastic and mulch
First of all - Awesome mustache
I am here because I was seeking a way to curb weeds without all the outdated methods I was told to use to curb weeds (the round up, the weed barrier). I moved into an old home that was "professionally" landscaped (in other words, thrown together as quickly as possible with all the focus only on aesthetics) and I am in the process of removing pounds of weed barrier!! I think it is felt material- thick and fibrous, terrible! So hard to cut! Everything you describe in your video that becomes an obstacle is exactly what is going on in my yard! All my trees were sick, I consulted with an arborist to see if they needed to be chopped down :( Luckily he informed me ( just as you mention in your vid) the barrier was suffocating the roots and also preventing the tree from thriving (trees can shed to provide warmth in cooler months and keep moisture in during dryer months) Also, I did not even think about the worms! This was a great vid!
I’m going through the same thing! He also had 8” of moldy mulch that I had to have removed! I’m just now, after a year, getting things back to normal. 🙏☀️
Please watch Permculture teachers: Morag Gamble and Geoff Lawton"; I use their method of weed control by using wet layered cardboard in an overlapping fashion. I soak the ground first, cut the top of the weeds and leave them in place on the top of the soil for the worms, put the cardboard down, dnd woodchips on top. Make sure there are no gaps where light gets in and allow weeds to grow. Done! I have had no weeds for two years.😀
This is a great video! I also had experience with wood mulch turning into compost and the fabric being a barrier and weeds growing in it. Will consider the cardboard idea. One issue with wood mulch is when it is blown it goes away and need to replace.
That was a great deal of very valuable information. Thank you for educating us on how to have a beautiful, weed-free yard without harming the environment, soil organisms or our own bodies!
Several layers of newspaper can be used as well. That is what we used in our garden when I grew up.
The trouble is, newspaper is a lot harder to come by these days. It's not so endemic at it once was. So the quantities needed to mulch with can be difficult to come by.
Get a large roll of brown paper like you see at a furniture store or deli and use that as a weed barrier. I like this because it doesn't have ink or any other contaminants. Great video.
Add thick layers of news paper that is damp then layer with last year's composted leaves, compost and then mulch. Thus is, the eaence of lasagna gardening.
This is what I was thinking.. You can get end rolls from some Newspaper companies for free..
Would used/inked newpaper be safe?
@@melanierust7129 newsprint ink is soy based. Is it gmo, probably.
@wendef ung Yes too thin. I wouldnt use it. Think WORMS. put down newspapers corrugated cardboard, all the layers you want of that. The worms eat it and return to the soil their black gold as plant food.
This worked so well in my own yard my whole family have asked for me to show them how
Never thought about the worms. Good point. I had a small raised box and I used a metal fencing with a layer of fabric on it and I still had the weeds eventually. My mother used simple newspaper weighed down with rocks and covered with mulch. She grew organically and had a green thumb for sure. Now I retired and have more time...I think Ill try it her way...too simple and breaks down at the end of the season over the winter. Now if that would only take care of the horribly invasive bush roots that take over everything...lol.
It is so true what you said about all this stuff! The best I experienced about this content is to put CLUMP-LIKE-GROWING Perennials together (with enough place to grow properly, best work so called self-cleaning plants, which need not much care) and maybe here an there some groundcoverplants(but be sure that they matches with the perennials inside the bed!!) e.g: if you put evergreens in it, be sure that there is nothing in competition to them, and be sure that other plant in it are pretty well static, like boxwood, spireas, feathergrass (important: always clump-like-growing grasses!!), pulp-plants which can come up through in spring, etc. All Plants in beighbourhood must have the some growing-strenght, the same light, and - most important - the same need for water!! If you consider these things I can give you a suceed warranty. Enjoy! :-)
Fantastic idea 💡
I used the fabric in April & now the weeds are coming through in September 😩
I have lots of removal boxes in my shed. I’ll be doing this tomorrow 😅 thanks for sharing.
Truth! We just weeded a large bed on the side of our house. Landscape fabric was put down several years ago with mulch on top. The weeds were putting roots down through the fabric. I also had to get a knife to split the fabric to plant bulbs. I'm going to go back and cut out sections at a time because I hate it lol.
Liz NYP
FYI: I decided to renovate and extend a 3' boarder on the perimeter of my property. Immediately I discovered a very heavy fabric covering every square foot that must have been 20 years old. I quickly deduced the best way to remove the unwanted fabric was to use a reciprocating saw with a fine blade to cut through sod and fabric simultaneously. Not fun, but fast. Good luck
Wow, I learned something! Those big cardboards will be useful now in the backyard instead of the blue bin.
Tks very much for your video; one of the best ones i've watched and high quality HD !! You seem really passionated about using organic, bio-degradeable materials to block out weeds. Tks for ur video and that stopped me wasting time buying more landscape fabric. Keep up the good work.
Wow!!!! I just left Lowes and spent $50 on landscape fabric. Geez.
Thanks for the information. It's a big learning curve. I should have made a renovation planner before this project.
New subscriber here!
Thanks for all you do, great video for those who don't understand being as organic as possible can be easier.
Thank-you so much for watching! :-)
This is absolutely the best video breaking down pro and cons of landscape fabric and providing brilliant alternatives. I’m definitely subscribing to this channel! Thanks for the good info!
I've been using cardboard for years in my garden. Works good for me. Good work on groundcover. Looks good
Excelllllllllent idea! I LOVE the look of flowers and grass bunched together and it NEVER occurred to me to use that design and other ground covers to “weed out” the weeds! 🙌 Thanks for the great video!!
I AGREE !! Great video, I recently moved and my new place has landscape in front/back, that desperately need help! since, I'm on a budget, this is perfect ! I recently bought 5 bags for $10 of Mulch, I can use some in the front/back, I always take a before/after picture for family and friends. I'm also going to use tires for décor. thanks again for sharing.. I really appreciate you, I'm a Single 55 yr. woman on a budget. Educating myself to do different projects around the house.
Grateful for this video! I live in Brazil and I started using the "no dig" method a short time ago, precisely in a place where it rains A LOT, up to 3 meters a year. It's nice to plant in Cubatão, you just stick stakes in the ground and then take root. It's tropical climate, plants grow wildly. But if the cardboard pieces are too big, the rain drags the mulching!... I ended up preferring smaller pieces, with more overlap. The water soon finds an outlet and the roots too, it's been working very well. I learned later that they call it "the lasagna garden"...
A big hug, from Brazil. And... GET OUT BOLSONARO, let's uproot this guy like the weed he is.
I love the idea of planting plants closer together.
I have used cardboard in the past, works well. Big box stores are a great source. Be aware that you will need to separate things out such as waxed boxes and too small boxes. Though the small boxes can be useful to help cover slits in the underlying cardboard. Talk to a manager ahead of time, and if they are agreeable, find a friend with a truck!
I used the landscape sheeting on a large, long bank years ago. Lesson learned. What a mess I created. I use cardboard now. Except in my back 1/4 acre fenced in yard. My large dogs think the cardboard is for digging up and shaking around. Everywhere else, its use has created a nice earthworm laden, rich soil that my perennials and boxwoods love.
I have been fighting bindweed in one of my flower beds for many years!!! Bindweed is very viney like morning glory. I have literally spent so many hours of my life trying to pull it up. It is a constant battle. The names I have called this weed while pulling it out are not very nice! 😂
I am going to get my boxes out of the recycling bin later today. Once my maple tree drops it’s whirly gigs, I’m putting down cardboard and topping it with mulch! Thanks for the great idea!!!
I use cardboard and it was suggested to me to get the cardboard wet first to make large pieces easier to lay down, or stay down if it's a windy day. I hose them down, or I lay them in place while it's raining (a rainy day is also the best kind of day to weed!). You don't *need* to do this, but if you're finding the process clumsy, get them wet first and see if it helps you.
Definitely pay attention to taking off the labels and tape! Many mailing labels contain BPA (as well as register receipt tape). Removing the inorganic parts off your boxes keeps the nasty out of your soil biome.
Cardboard is free at the mattress shop! Huge pieces get the job done!
Thank you so very much for sharing this advice. I’ve got a small yard but has very bad weeds (and my neighbours don’t bother with maintaining their yards much). This will save me both money and physical back ache pulling weeds! I’m not very knowledgable about gardening, but am hoping to learn, and so want to thank you for the advice about which plants work well - I want to do what I can to help the environment and our bees. Thanks again :)
OMG, I’m so glad I watched your video, I just bought a roll of landscape fabric today hoping to rid my fairy garden of weeds.
I work at a place that throws away tons of cardboard everyday, I can get that free 😄😄 thanks so much for this video 😊
Thanks for watching! I'm glad this idea can help out. 😃
You are so RIGHT!!! Landscaping fabric becomes a mess. I saved all my Amazon and delivery boxes for a year. I had boxes taken up the place. I broke them down and put them in leaf and garden bags. I used plastic. I like plastic because it locks in moisture. The plants I did with Plastic did better than the plants with cardboard, but the mulch breaks down on the plastic too and weeds grow, So ultimatley the cardboard is the best. Because it changes over the soil and makes it better after it breaks down