Super Effective Weed-Free Mulch From The Pet Store!

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  • Опубликовано: 10 апр 2018
  • We need to mulch our garlic and strawberries so they are protected from the cold weather coming. The mulch will also help insulate the soil to reduce watering and stress from heat.
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Комментарии • 757

  • @RADARTechie
    @RADARTechie 6 лет назад +759

    I tried this, and didnt get weeds, but did get rabbits. I think the bedding I got had little brown rabbit seeds in it though.

    • @MIgardener
      @MIgardener  6 лет назад +84

      A+ comment my friend...

    • @DaybirdAviaries
      @DaybirdAviaries 6 лет назад +13

      #LOL

    • @IAmHumanJake
      @IAmHumanJake 6 лет назад +10

      Lol

    • @beckywatt5048
      @beckywatt5048 6 лет назад +8

      Greg Gasiorowski Along with squirrels and woodchucks !!

    • @Kim.Salazar
      @Kim.Salazar 6 лет назад +6

      Hahaha we were thinking of mulching and paving the backyard but I was worried about the rabbits usually hanging around. Looks like I won't miss them too much if I do this!

  • @onfarm6521
    @onfarm6521 6 лет назад +302

    I’m not trying to correct just want people to understand that straw is a biproduct of wheat not hay. Hay is the biproduct of pasture grass cut and dried. Just a heads up!

    • @MIgardener
      @MIgardener  6 лет назад +56

      Thank you for your polite correction. I had straw bails, and hay bails, and my brain thought one thing but my tongue said another.

    • @JediTrombonist
      @JediTrombonist 6 лет назад +22

      I was going to mention this as well, as I'm watching this video on my TV right now.
      Straw is a byproduct of grains, and not just wheat. Oats and barley have straw as a byproduct as well.
      When you bale straw, you're cutting the stems of wheat, barley or oats.

    • @dianakim298
      @dianakim298 6 лет назад +7

      If I use hay then will wheat, alfalfa and grass seedlings can take over my garden? I thought the hay was at least a year old and you use it in Luke’s gardening method helps retain water in his beds when he puts it in the middle of his garden. ?

    • @Clay1234H
      @Clay1234H 6 лет назад +19

      If you choose to use straw, the grain (wheat, barely, oats etc.) has already been harvested and the seed in theory should be completely removed by the combine during harvesting and you should have no issues. Hay on the other had is basically grass (wild, timothy, alfalfa etc) that has been cut and baled with no seeds removed, so the seed content of hay could vary depending on when it was harvested

    • @dollyperry3020
      @dollyperry3020 6 лет назад +14

      Alfalfa is a Legume...but it appears as a grass which I'm sure is one reason for the confusion. Hay can be any type of grassy plant from clover to Timothy to pasture grass. It just has to be cut before it loses it's green which is the sign of a loss of nutricion.

  • @AnneGoggansQHHT
    @AnneGoggansQHHT 4 года назад +20

    For those who use straw...The bad thing about straw is that it is loaded with weed killer unless it’s from organic oats or wheat. Weed killer is used as a desiccant in addition to its intended use making all dried crops just soaked in it

  • @giggiwidit5638
    @giggiwidit5638 4 года назад +48

    I'd love to use this on my allotment, but my finances just wont allow, even for this extra expense =(. But I plan to use the Dried Leaves method of insulation, and, to stop them from blowing about, I plan to use some netting, that was left on my plot by the previous renter, who (apparently) worked the plot, completely by hand (no rotovators or anything other than hand tools) for 30 years, and was in his 90's when he finally had to give the plot up, and he kindly left me with quite a lot of useful items, for which I am very grateful to him =)

  • @calmheart1782
    @calmheart1782 4 года назад +252

    SQUASH LOVERS PLEASE READ THIS: On another video that someone posted about how to try to control the squash vine borer moth, a commenter said they used cedar shavings around their squash and it “worked every time”. I got so excited and commented that it made so much sense. Moths hate cedar! I said I was going to try it and I have. AND it is working! My zucchini looks beautiful and NO squash vine borer! One of my plants have at least 6 zucchinis on it and another even more! Just 3 plants is giving us enough fruit to eat several times a week! I’m starting more zucchini seeds and some yellow squash. For everyone one who gave up growing squash, zucchini and others in that family, get some cedar mulch for your plants! (P. S. I haven’t seen any stink bugs either!)

    • @calmheart1782
      @calmheart1782 4 года назад +42

      Update: 6/2/20. Still no SVBMs! Just delicious zucchini!

    • @laurenschafer617
      @laurenschafer617 4 года назад +4

      TELL ME MORE. I started my first garden this year and the only thing growing was my squash. It was 6 ft long and beautiful, then I found the little brats!!! I tried to pull them out but finally pulled out the plants. Now I want to plant pumpkins and Gourds but I’m terrified!!

    • @JENNIFERLE2012
      @JENNIFERLE2012 4 года назад +7

      @Calm Heart: How do you grow your zucchini plants, vertically or horizontally? I grew one in a container and used tomato cage to keep it upright, but then it got attached by the vine borer and killed my plant. It was my first time growing zucchini so I didn't know how to recognize the signs and symptoms at the early stage.

    • @antona2113
      @antona2113 3 года назад +4

      @rootsandrefuge

    • @AkSonya1010
      @AkSonya1010 3 года назад +5

      Grow them vertical as well with one steak in the middle and grow up like he recommends tomatoes with three steaks overall. OR I have mine growing next to a high tunnel. I so far haven't had a problem with pests but I did with blight until I went vertical so I am going to add the cedar to keep the bugs away and help with moisture.

  • @Mrpurple75
    @Mrpurple75 3 года назад +19

    Been doing this for years, good to see I’m not crazy

  • @MysticFiddler1
    @MysticFiddler1 3 года назад +19

    So I'm a gardener who has relied on the idea that cedar is great for repelling bugs but deters other plants from growing (just look under a cedar tree in the forest--nuttin' growing there). So with your suggestion I had to update my research from the 1960s and learned it's okay. Thanks for bringing me into this century.

  • @Jim19826301
    @Jim19826301 6 лет назад +40

    Tractor supply sells pine savings in bales just like that. They have large shavings and fine shavings for $5 a bale. I always use that for my Onions. Works great!

  • @heavymechanic2
    @heavymechanic2 4 года назад +33

    Luke, I used animal bedding (large pine flakes) sold for horse stalls on some Amish Paste tomatoes to conserve moisture and it worked out very well. Had a really great tomato crop with very little maintenance.

    • @miaj8296
      @miaj8296 Год назад

      Can i use the one its already been used by animals but is still quite clean and still light and fluffy?

  • @MrMattDat
    @MrMattDat 3 года назад +11

    If you are in the northeast, the absolute best groundcover to use is saltmarsh hay. This is available at many nurseries and has zero weed content. What's even better is that it stays put, and takes a long time to break down. (helps keep the soil moist through the summer, especially if you lay in a soaker line!). The best solution I've ever found!

  • @lifesprodject5265
    @lifesprodject5265 3 года назад +58

    Please support your local farm supplier. We just had a farm supplier go out of business because of 2 new TS stores built within 6 miles of each other. The local farm supplier was in this area for over 40 years.
    Just like Wally world.

    • @MrFarva85
      @MrFarva85 3 года назад +3

      Support local wherever you can!

    • @lifesprodject5265
      @lifesprodject5265 3 года назад +5

      @@MrFarva85 yes we will be at the mercy of the cooperation if we dont.

    • @mimidroy725
      @mimidroy725 3 года назад

      So heartbreaking...

    • @charlesroberts6490
      @charlesroberts6490 3 года назад

      I bet ts doesn’t carry all the stuff the ither guy had either

    • @tonij9089
      @tonij9089 3 года назад

      That's sad..😔

  • @markant62
    @markant62 6 лет назад +57

    I use cardboard with woodchip on the top, supresses the weeds locks in the moisture plus the worms love it! Woodchip can be often sourced free from a local tree surgeon.

    • @kath6229
      @kath6229 3 года назад +1

      You should make a video, too.

    • @mel3256
      @mel3256 2 года назад

      Yes Cardboard is good mulch

    • @Chet1333
      @Chet1333 2 года назад

      Do you have a pic of ? Do you cut up the cardboard first, or what exactly is the process?

    • @markant62
      @markant62 2 года назад +1

      @@Chet1333 just remove all the tape / staples from Cardboard boxes ( plain Brown ones are probably best) open them out & just lay on the Soil surface covering any Weeds Grass etc , then cover the Cardboard with Woodchips.

  • @RiverPlaid
    @RiverPlaid 6 лет назад +7

    Thank you Luke. I had not realized I could use this. I am thankful for ya.

  • @Z1gguratVert1go
    @Z1gguratVert1go 6 лет назад +98

    My grandma's old trick: never throw out old bed sheets, keep them. Then when a cold snap is coming, cover up the babies with those. Drop them down and use bricks to keep the wind from blowing them off. Using that in tandem with mulch should work even better. If the plants are small enough that you're worried the sheet will flatten them, putting small sticks or short stakes to act as tent poles will keep the weight of the sheets off of the plants.

    • @ms.lgraves4147
      @ms.lgraves4147 4 года назад +4

      Wow! Cool beans!🙃

    • @Tinyteacher1111
      @Tinyteacher1111 4 года назад +6

      Thanks! I love advice from grandmas!!

    • @Matt-ty6hp
      @Matt-ty6hp 3 года назад

      I’ve done that, but I really like this better. Getting rocks to weigh down the sheets and trying not to smash the plants can be a pain. You don’t have to pick any of this stuff up!

    • @sohahashim9175
      @sohahashim9175 3 года назад +3

      I got lot of shhepwool that was suuposed to be burnt by the shepherds. I took it and mulched around my trees in winter. My trees are flourishing this year.

    • @Tracy-Inches
      @Tracy-Inches 3 года назад +3

      Did that just this year, good advice grandma!

  • @ronnielee3162
    @ronnielee3162 6 лет назад +4

    I love how you mentioned aeration. I would not have thought about that. Thank you so much for this video!

  • @kevindecoteau3186
    @kevindecoteau3186 6 лет назад +4

    Thank you for this suggestion. After many years of not having a garden this Spring I am beginning one, love the shavings idea.

  • @fumasterchu
    @fumasterchu 6 лет назад +14

    I get those at my local feed store for 5 bucks and use them in my chicken and duck coop. I usually clean out the coop and put it in my compost pile, but have put the used bedding on my garden in the Fall to compost the hot manure and in the Spring there is nothing left but bedding.

  • @RobBackyardGardenerr
    @RobBackyardGardenerr 6 лет назад +7

    Great tip on a very affordable and practical mulch Luke. I'll be trying it out on a few beds for sure!

  • @tomcahill6981
    @tomcahill6981 4 года назад +2

    What a great idea about mulching raised beds. I have about 130 square feet of raised beds. My neighbor is a woodworker and is always asking me if I'd like some of his pine shavings. I, from time to time, take a huge bag of the stuff and put it in one of my two compost bins. Now I can get some cedar bedding, mix it with the pine saw dust and mulch my veggie garden. Great idea.

  • @clarissaeastom3671
    @clarissaeastom3671 4 года назад +1

    Love it! I did this this year and not only is it so pretty but it’s def helping my pots hold moisture

  • @lisanowakow3688
    @lisanowakow3688 5 лет назад +16

    In NM where I live we have sand for soil. I have the best success when I use 1/31 sand, 1/3 peat and 1/3 wood shavings in the garden beds. We recently discovered that the Tractor Supply Store has wood shavings for 1/2 the cost of the pet stores. Just make sure to stay away from cedar shavings as a mix in the dirt.

  • @Error-eb9gv
    @Error-eb9gv 6 лет назад +7

    love using the pine, looks amazing on the raised beds; never thought of mixing it with cedar but I do have a chipper/ shredder I use to mulch tree service chips into nice much for putting around plants.

  • @adrianreynolds2226
    @adrianreynolds2226 Год назад +1

    I appreciate how detailed yet simple your explanations are. Really helps to demystify gardening. Keep putting out these informative videos.

  • @CraigOverend
    @CraigOverend 6 лет назад +10

    I applied used pine shavings from my guinea pig over a dry summer here in Australia. The birds dug at it for juicy worms underneath and made an absolute mess. I'd cover mine next time.
    Pine shavings also work best soaked with compost, preferably vermicompost before application. My fruit trees love it.

  • @maryreynolds8568
    @maryreynolds8568 6 лет назад +4

    Wow, and I'm cold at 60 degrees tonight here in Texas! A lot of what you grow there won't grow here, but you still have great ideas. Spring has done sprung, and we are heading into summer. Thanks for your advice!

  • @rubylady7126
    @rubylady7126 4 года назад +4

    Again, I learned something very educational from your channel and I would Never, in a million years, thought of using animal bedding for this. Thank you so much for the great information!!

  • @prillyg
    @prillyg 4 года назад +95

    I just went through most of the comments. calling straw hay really got people to start typing. LOL

    • @TwoTrakMind
      @TwoTrakMind 4 года назад +6

      I was just going to comment on that. LOL! Clearly I don't need to. 😀

    • @TennZen77
      @TennZen77 3 года назад +2

      I was getting ready to type too. LOL

    • @Kate98755
      @Kate98755 3 года назад

      i didn't listen to the video because i was reading the hay straw alpha discussion 😂

  • @eileendonegan2824
    @eileendonegan2824 5 лет назад +25

    I was raised on a farm and our straw came from the oats. You stated that straw comes from hay. They are two different crops.

  • @magicmantis
    @magicmantis 5 лет назад +8

    I've totally done this! At the 99 cents store they sometimes have bedding for small animals like the big bags you have in the video. I can attest that ot works!

  • @galesmith1490
    @galesmith1490 6 лет назад +2

    I've been wondering about this and now you've answered my question! Thanks Luke! Wish I could send some warm Arizona weather your way. Hang in there!

  • @jasonoilar
    @jasonoilar 6 лет назад +14

    Amazing to see your channel grow so fast. I think you were at 100k subs when I started watching. I’ve probably only missed a handful of videos in the last 1.5 years. You guys are the best! I bought most of my seeds from you and they all germinated great. Thanks.

  • @craftersusan
    @craftersusan 5 лет назад +15

    I followed this tip last growing season and it worked great for me. Thanks!!!

    • @TypingGirl
      @TypingGirl 5 лет назад +1

      What were you growing when you did this? I just added pine and cedar shavings to my tomatoes, peppers and zucchini and now I'm worried it was a bad idea.

    • @nicoles6124
      @nicoles6124 4 года назад

      @@TypingGirl How did it go?

  • @jayanddenissejones6648
    @jayanddenissejones6648 6 лет назад +3

    Thanks Luke! Great idea! Looking forward to trying this on my beds

  • @traddymom4368
    @traddymom4368 6 лет назад +21

    You can probably get bigger bags of the pine shavings at Tractor Supply for less money. I buy pine shavings by the bale at the feed store for around $5. It's gotta be at least 3 times more than what you have there.

  • @richardnfudge
    @richardnfudge 3 года назад +4

    I’m trying cedar bedding as mulch for my container garden this year. Thanks for the idea!

  • @arletteschulzelock1372
    @arletteschulzelock1372 3 года назад +1

    I did this last year and worked great! I was very happy with it.

  • @strangechild1926
    @strangechild1926 3 года назад +2

    I have only recently turned to RUclips for others answers to my questions. Thank you for this video. I can’t wait to try this mulch method. I have always wanted to use pet cedar for all my mulching, and never tried it.

  • @bethanygroskopf
    @bethanygroskopf 6 лет назад +52

    This is wonderful! I am blessed to have a rabbit farm. Lots of incredible shavings/hay mulch with rabbit manure mixed in, so not only does it mulch, the "slow-release poo pellets" add nutrients all year! Everything on my 1/8acre farm is covered in bunny mulch.
    Thanks for all your videos, here's to a GREEN 2018!!

    • @patriciacole8773
      @patriciacole8773 2 года назад

      I have 20 year old rabbit manure. Is it still good for nutrients?

  • @clintcowles7563
    @clintcowles7563 3 года назад +1

    I'm using a dye free cedar mulch of my raised beds this year. I'm just over one week from sowing. Everything is coming up. It is currently May 24 2021. And I live in Northern Michigan. Happy growing!

  • @lettyzane2720
    @lettyzane2720 4 года назад +17

    I’m in Southern California- tried cedar bedding in my raised beds a few years ago and it kept my soil too dry for our weather. Here we need mulch that holds the moisture better, straw works great here

  • @lindamgalvao
    @lindamgalvao 5 лет назад +18

    As others noted, straw and hay are two separate products. There are no seeds in straw - it's the stems of grasses that have had the seed heads removed (wheat, rice, barley, etc.)

    • @colleenbartel340
      @colleenbartel340 2 года назад +8

      Straw can carry a lot of seeds depending on the quality of the harvest job.

    • @lovegymnasts
      @lovegymnasts 2 года назад +3

      My straw was loaded with seeds even though they told me it was seed free and great for mulching my garden. Ticked me off. It caused me a big headache weeding brand new raised garden beds.

    • @Peaceful-resistance1
      @Peaceful-resistance1 2 года назад

      Our oat straw is excellent quality. No seeds at all. Cost $10 a bale though!

    • @lovegymnasts
      @lovegymnasts 2 года назад +1

      @@Peaceful-resistance1 Mine cost me just under $10 a bale. Couldn't find the receipt to return the unused ones I purchased so I donated them to an animal shelter.

    • @griffyyt1783
      @griffyyt1783 Год назад +1

      @@lovegymnasts my guess, someone sold you hay for straw. They look similar. If there are seeds in a baled product, you can see it by sifting the product over bare ground or sidewalk.

  • @redcorsair14
    @redcorsair14 3 года назад +9

    Neat. I just saw this stuff at my local Tractor Supply and was wondering if it could be used. Now the RUclips algorithm is reading people's minds and not just listening to you lol.

    • @harperdron5076
      @harperdron5076 3 года назад +3

      THE SAME THING HAPPENED TO ME. Never mentioned it or anything besides a passing mental note. Creepy

  • @Z1gguratVert1go
    @Z1gguratVert1go 6 лет назад +4

    Early season trick I stumbled upon: using a very dark colored mulch absorbs more solar radiation, heats things up a bit faster. But any mulch is better than no mulch, by a lot. I've seen all-natural black colored landscaping mulch at stores that I used in a pinch once and it worked great. It lightens over the season but you only really need it to be black at the start of the year. Not as cost effective as the animal bedding though.
    Also props on mixing the two.

  • @dl7919
    @dl7919 5 лет назад +1

    I've used this type litter for mulch before. It seems to really be a good weed deterrent. I got bigger packages of it at the tractor store for horses. Takes quite sometime to break down. I grew some great purple potatoes in the bed I used this in. I will be using this again in some of my beds.

  • @TheFiown
    @TheFiown 3 года назад +3

    I use hemp, looks similar to bedding, smells great. I use it also to mark all the area and lines where I planted seeds.

  • @jackiehorsley9263
    @jackiehorsley9263 6 лет назад +2

    Luke I would never thought of using those kinds of mulch in my garden beds that's a good idea I well be thinking about that

  • @TarahPierce
    @TarahPierce 2 года назад +1

    I use pine shavings for my 3 chickens' bedding. It absorbs some of the moisture from their poops, too. I then use it like you do - mulch in the garden. Works great!

  • @oddmaguire
    @oddmaguire 4 года назад +1

    We plant garlic in the fall in Kentucky. We cover the bulbs with a think layer of straw. The bulbs sprout before Thanksgiving and live alo through the winter with no problems. Love your videos. Thank you

  • @andrewgoldfish
    @andrewgoldfish 6 лет назад +1

    Good idea. We've been trying to figure out a good mulch for parts of our garden. Leaves really do blow around when we tried it also.

  • @PaperToPetals
    @PaperToPetals 6 лет назад +2

    Thank you for sharing! I will use this method!

  • @chicken26arick
    @chicken26arick 6 лет назад +1

    I can really tell that your plant diet is successful. I bet you’re feeling really good. Good ideas in this video!

  • @michelle2508
    @michelle2508 6 лет назад +3

    I'm definitely going to try this. It's really convenient and I would also think the cedar would help to repel, at least a few, insects.

  • @donaldthump5222
    @donaldthump5222 4 года назад +4

    Both straw and hay can be called “forage” but there's an important distinction between the two. Straw is a by-product of seed (or grain) production. For example, a farmer who grows wheat will harvest the grain; the dry plant that remains after harvest is straw.

  • @ES-gy1ti
    @ES-gy1ti 3 года назад +2

    I used this in my strawberry and tomato's last year works great.

  • @hutchersonbritt
    @hutchersonbritt 6 лет назад +1

    This is an awesome tip I will be trying this out myself!

  • @skmarrama
    @skmarrama 5 лет назад +2

    I’ve been looking for a cheap alternative for mulching. Thank you!

  • @jmthomas29
    @jmthomas29 5 лет назад +2

    I'll be sure to try this. Thank you.

  • @katie6131
    @katie6131 3 года назад

    I just used this method on a windy day. I had to wet down the bedding as I worked. This allowed me to pick up big chunks of bedding with one hand and put them in place.

  • @daniw9937
    @daniw9937 4 года назад

    We haven’t had rain for almost 2 months here in Maine. Just threw some on the tops of my beds. Fingers crossed. Thanks for the info Luke!

  • @Junkinsally
    @Junkinsally 2 года назад +3

    There are pros and cons to using wood chips (flakes-pine or cedar). Before wood fully breaks down it can bind with the nitrogen in your soil and keep it from being used as needed by the plants. To prevent this, remove any unbroken down pieces before top dressing with compost or working the soil in any way. You don’t want those larger pieces in your soil. After working your soil and replanting, add a another layer of wood chips as mulch.

  • @JastaAdventures
    @JastaAdventures 6 лет назад

    Thanks for the video. We got horrible weeds over the winter from using straw. Never again! I will definitely try this out.

  • @jenniferpaxton5425
    @jenniferpaxton5425 3 года назад +16

    I see this video is from a few years ago. Are you still using this method? Has it worked as well as you thought it would? Any drawbacks? Is this appropriate for all of your plants that need a mulch layer or is it better for specific plants?

  • @truthinlovemama
    @truthinlovemama 4 года назад

    Great idea! I have containers and did not need a whole truckload of mulched yard waste from my city, but didn’t want to buy bags of dyed mulch to put on our food. Time to head to Tractor Supply! Thank you!

  • @daliacastello2608
    @daliacastello2608 6 лет назад +11

    I guess people don't read any other comments so many corrections on the straw and hay. Thanks for the info.

  • @Audrey-km9in
    @Audrey-km9in 2 года назад

    Hi there, Luke - great info! I am going to do this today. FYI - straw is not a byproduct of hay, it is a byproduct of grain. Straw is the stems/stalks of wheat or other grain. Until next time, have a fabulous day!

  • @phillully4472
    @phillully4472 6 лет назад +1

    thanks for the good tips on the type of combo mulch your using
    pet bedding (pine& cedar) good tip
    thanks!

  • @MATTP545
    @MATTP545 6 лет назад +30

    Just got into woodworking and I seem to have an endless supply of this stuff... Don't have a garden on the new place so ended up dumping a bunch around a pine tree....I wonder if the pine tree was a bit disturbed by this

    • @roxannb2746
      @roxannb2746 4 года назад +2

      Haha

    • @ghostridergale
      @ghostridergale 3 года назад +3

      I’m a woodworker also, you got to be very careful how much sawdust you use around your plants, I learned the hard way! Too much sawdust blocks oxygen getting to your plants and kills them. Sawdust will cake together and pretty much block everything from getting thru it! Sawdust and this wood mulch is not the same thing! Be fore warned and save yourself from making my past mistakes!

  • @BrianHerard
    @BrianHerard 6 лет назад +2

    Great tip. You can get both fine and course pine at Tractor Supply if you have one near you.

  • @Sandra-nx3pl
    @Sandra-nx3pl 6 лет назад +2

    thank you for the tip ...i like the idea..have a good day Ray.

  • @bbtruth2161
    @bbtruth2161 3 года назад +1

    I love using pine bedding as mulch. It works great between rows to keep weeds down. Doesn't have to be too thick and it layers together and stays put. Fairly cheap. Decomposes well. Worms love it. Breaks down great overwinter for the next year. I use the stuff all over the place. I do mulching and smothering with straw and leaves and actual wood chips, depending on what I am doing. The pine is acidic, but neither the needles or the wood will significantly change ph. As they decompose, the ph actually goes more neutral. I mulch my strawberries with pine shavings and they absolutely love it. I do cover the strawberries with straw come winter time for a little extra insulation. Gets pretty cold in MN sometimes.

  • @jeannetterivera8230
    @jeannetterivera8230 3 года назад +2

    Definitely gonna try this...I usually add cedar mulch behind my Hedges to keep bugs away from my house:) but this year for my Strawberries;) Thanks! 🍓 It also smells so good wn entering my porch!

  • @spir5102
    @spir5102 5 лет назад

    Thanks so much for the info. I am a Master Gardener and have never heard this tip before. I never thought of going to my tractor supply. Seems like it would be quite a bit cheaper.

  • @nubee1973
    @nubee1973 6 лет назад +1

    I just finish putting up my garden beds. It’s so muddy where I put them because there’s no grass. We were trying to use material we alReady had, so I put stone. We have a lot of bags of stone and still have 3 bags left. It looks so pretty now, I can’t wait to start panting

  • @floresmercedes1
    @floresmercedes1 6 лет назад +1

    Thank you I'm going to try it.

  • @dollyperry3020
    @dollyperry3020 6 лет назад +99

    Luke, You are mistaken about straw, at least in my area. I live in wheat/barley land and after the crop is harvested, they cut the stems of the plant and bale them. That is the straw. It doesn't have any seeds on it because the seeds were harvested as the crop. There is an issue of the spray that was put on them. But no seeds.

    • @thepatriotfarmer3580
      @thepatriotfarmer3580 6 лет назад +18

      We get wheat straw where I live, occasional seed, just let it grow to about 6" and then cut it at the bottom and it doesn't grow back. Not an issue, I left what little wheat straw seed germination I had in my raised beds all winter and cut it before planting. It gives the mycorrhizae something to do all winter. Straw seed doesn't spread after the fact either unless you let it grow to seed...

    • @jimmysingleton9417
      @jimmysingleton9417 6 лет назад +14

      Correct. Hay is grown from alfalfa and fed to livestock. Straw is from barley or wheat after they harvested the seed

    • @caragrandlegardens766
      @caragrandlegardens766 6 лет назад +8

      I live in Oregon and sometimes not all areas of the crop come to harvest at the same time. When they bail the straw seeds of the crop are trapped to grow later. I have shown in my second video. (I only have two garden videos so far.) But the nice part is, straw is made out of annual grasses so once you kill them they won't come back unlike hay.

    • @patrickharper9297
      @patrickharper9297 6 лет назад +15

      Not all hay comes from alfalfa; there are many sources you can turn into hay... Dried grass being the easiest

    • @Drakesfamily6
      @Drakesfamily6 6 лет назад +4

      Dolly thanks for sharing that. I was wondering what the difference was and just hadn't ever googled it yet 😉 Now I know 💙

  • @TheBobelly628
    @TheBobelly628 2 года назад

    Thanks for video and tips! Very helpful 🌸

  • @connieatkins7390
    @connieatkins7390 3 года назад

    I'm doing this. Such a great idea. Thanks

  • @summerbeemeadow
    @summerbeemeadow 2 года назад

    Well done and much-appreciated information.
    Thank you!

  • @SonniesGardenPA
    @SonniesGardenPA 6 лет назад +12

    I use the bedding from my hamsters, My plants love it.

  • @WATCHINGTHEWATCHERS
    @WATCHINGTHEWATCHERS 5 лет назад +1

    In the UK we get frost up to the end of May. Late May and June is where most UK Gardner's plant out.
    My local Govenment dumps wood chip next next to my garden. Ìv mulched most of my beds including the strawberries.

  • @peggy5003
    @peggy5003 6 лет назад +2

    The northeast is going to get another cold blast in a week. It is very hard on the farmers. I love your very practical videos.

  • @kendradoneth3280
    @kendradoneth3280 5 лет назад +4

    I've never covered strawberries and they do just fine.

    • @kath6229
      @kath6229 3 года назад

      Where are you located?

  • @Jane-ez7yl
    @Jane-ez7yl 5 лет назад +16

    I love how the ads pop up for Roundup on a weed free garden video....NOT!!

    • @ES-mc3cc
      @ES-mc3cc 3 года назад +2

      They need customers to buy their product to pay for the lawsuit they lost concerning glyphosate.

  • @monaadams6529
    @monaadams6529 3 года назад

    Great info on the cedar saving the squash. Going to get it today.

  • @stellaluuk2713
    @stellaluuk2713 4 года назад +1

    Pine shaves are extremely variable, some bags are nice size shavings and others can be mostly saw dust.

  • @dawnrobbins5877
    @dawnrobbins5877 6 лет назад

    Bet it's going to work great! Thanks!

  • @pyramydseven
    @pyramydseven 5 лет назад +4

    Pine bails work great for my city chickens. 🤘

  • @MinkesMom
    @MinkesMom 5 лет назад +4

    Straw is a by-product of oats. Hay is a by-product of Hay says oat farmer Chessie. Another good source of mulch is a local saw mill (I just messaged mine) or a tree-in-yard cutter. I trade veg for wood chips.

  • @JohnDoe_88
    @JohnDoe_88 6 лет назад +20

    Wood mulching and happy to explain the benefits of less weeding, watering with more consistent moisture, fertilizing and insulating from either being too cold or hot... Someone might be getting back to Eden, Luke might try planting vegetables in his woodchips next.... I think at least one tomato grown in woodchips with trifecta would be a great idea to show in comparison to just compost.

  • @AnimeShinigami13
    @AnimeShinigami13 5 лет назад

    @MIgardener I have a guinea pig, and I use her dirty bedding as mulch. I've noticed that paper bedding tends to turn hard as rocks when routinely soaked and dried from the weather. Then again I make my own paper from scrap newspaper and it does the same.

  • @karenfox2179
    @karenfox2179 6 лет назад +13

    I can't count the times someone upset me and my parents would say, "just let it roll off your back, it's not worth letting it upset you or making you say something you may regret".

  • @rwatts2155
    @rwatts2155 6 лет назад +3

    How's your baby? Keep up the great work with the videos. I'm a huge fan!

  • @V_626
    @V_626 5 лет назад +3

    I used the pine on my strawberries and was going to use straw on my garlic till it sprouted grass. Glad to have caught this video ... to the hardware store tomorrow to get the cedar and will be mulching my beds this weekend . I love your videos and my garden just keeps getting bigger thanks for sharing your knowledge 😊

  • @susanravella6261
    @susanravella6261 2 года назад

    Straw is the stem part of cereal crops after the seed heads have been harvested. One year long ago, we replaced our lawn and used straw as mulch to protect the grass seed, and grew a fine crop of oats ! Lol!

  • @plantgurugangsta7299
    @plantgurugangsta7299 3 года назад +2

    Ive heard ceder is also a pest deturent and good for dealing with fungas knats, makes it so they suffocate and can't fly out, especially in pots.😁

  • @MyChilepepper
    @MyChilepepper 5 лет назад +5

    Hay and straw has seeds and weed seeds plus mold!

  • @jeffreyphillips4182
    @jeffreyphillips4182 4 года назад +2

    I live in Georgia. Been warm here for 3 months now

  • @JohnDoe_88
    @JohnDoe_88 6 лет назад +3

    Could always have some extra woodchips on hand that you can usually find free to mulch your beds with and if you wanted removed at any point could move them on top of your woodchip path

    • @MIgardener
      @MIgardener  6 лет назад

      John Doe this is true, I just liked the idea that they would break down and be completely broken down by the late fall.

  • @ashleyfeinberg2988
    @ashleyfeinberg2988 5 лет назад +1

    I might use this mix to mulch my garden floor! I use wood chips in the beds themselves. It's the reverse of what Luke's got going on here haha.

  • @Kimmies991
    @Kimmies991 6 лет назад

    Awesome information, thanks!