What is the BEST mulch for your garden? (Avoid the one that KILLS EVERYTHING)

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  • Опубликовано: 4 апр 2023
  • Which mulch is best for your garden? Today we cover the options, and share how you can keep your garden from getting wiped out.
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    David's gardening blog: www.thesurvivalgardener.com
    Whether you're going with a Back to Eden wood chip mulch, or pine bark, or pine needles, or grass clippings, or leaf mulch... today's video is for you. We know mulch is good for the garden, yet there are many mulching options! Mulching doesn't have to be complicated. In this video I share a little about fungally dominated soil and bacterially dominated soil, hay and straw mulch, grass clippings vs. pine mulch and more... but in the end, you'll see how easy it is to mulch, and chances are you have some free mulch already available on your property. We also talk about why the Ruth Stout gardening method can now KILL YOUR GARDEN! Seriously. It's no joke. Herbicides in manure and in hay are a serious problem now, and you may have to grow your own mulch or plant a cover crop to beat it. Personally, we love sunn hemp and sudan-sorghum grass as biomass crops that give us lots of mulch and free compost. I have multiple other cheap gardening hacks in this video - thanks for watching!
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Комментарии • 830

  • @timdrake220
    @timdrake220 Год назад +528

    I prefer just mulching with fresh 100 dollar bills. Saves money over buying mulch at the store. 😆

  • @agrarianarc
    @agrarianarc Год назад +71

    An arborist lives down the road from us. Every couple months he drives up and asks if he can still dump his woodchips and I guide him to the newest area I need chips dumped onto. It’s a great arrangement 🙂
    Katie WI 5a

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  Год назад +7

      That is a great setup.

    • @supramby
      @supramby 9 месяцев назад +2

      Ever wonder if your bringing in a tree killing fungus such as oak wilt along with those dead trees he cut down and chipped

    • @MrAdadonny
      @MrAdadonny 3 месяца назад +1

      Long as it’s not an Oak tree farm… probably not an issue.

    • @agrarianarc
      @agrarianarc 3 месяца назад +1

      @@supramby no

    • @wild-radio7373
      @wild-radio7373 2 месяца назад

      I really LOVE your sign-off❤
      Cascadia OR 7a

  • @tabp8448
    @tabp8448 Год назад +179

    Thanks for another great video David! Just a tip for anyone that has a free or cheap source of hay that they aren't 100% sure is glyphosate-free, they can test it first by growing a few beans in it. They are fast growing and will show signs of toxic herbicides faster than any other plant.
    🌱🌱🌱🌱🌱

    • @melanielinkous8746
      @melanielinkous8746 Год назад +12

      That's great advice! I think David has a video on that very subject.

    • @patiencekates5975
      @patiencekates5975 Год назад +5

      That's what I do.

    • @priayief
      @priayief Год назад +4

      I don't have a problem with glyphosate. Years ago, I wondered about it. I had a 100 ft border around my yard and I planted sunflowers all along the border. For two years, I applied glyphosate to suppress weeds along a 50 ft section. I manually removed weeds in the remaining 50 ft, planted the seeds then mulched. The only difference I noticed was the glyphosate section was a lot less labor.

    • @Katydidit
      @Katydidit Год назад +25

      ​@@priayief The sunflowers will aid in remediation of the glyphosphate. The stuff David is referring to is Aminopyralid, Clopyralid, etc. Glyphosphate is the least of our worries.

    • @erbauungstutztaufgnade1875
      @erbauungstutztaufgnade1875 Год назад +2

      Great tipp!

  • @breaking_bear
    @breaking_bear Год назад +65

    I read 80 pages my 1st day of compost everything! And I'm almost done reading Grow or Die. I'm addicted to the Good books. Thanks David!

    • @ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim
      @ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim Год назад +6

      Me too! Just finished Grocery Row Gardening with no gardening experience and planted my first garden! David's saying of "if it doesn't grow it wasn't meant to grow" is keeping me optimistic.

    • @hazelbellefarm476
      @hazelbellefarm476 Год назад +5

      I love his writing too. Informative, interesting, and funnily witty too.

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  Год назад +6

      Thank you!

  • @honestlee4532
    @honestlee4532 Год назад +66

    I used wood chips and chop and drop around the yard to totally improve my soil. Big changes from a dry hard clay! Now I have worms everywhere and mushrooms popping up. My soil is much better in 3 years and it keeps getting better.

    • @gg-gn3re
      @gg-gn3re Год назад +1

      yep what you're likely doing is ruclips.net/video/JGxSDhnvUUc/видео.html lots of talks on it. Completely brings soil back to life

  • @Bennybob01
    @Bennybob01 Год назад +31

    Every single farm around here sprays grazon. It has been near impossible to find unsprayed hay but when we finally did the guy thought I was crazy for getting excited for his weedy hay.

    • @cherylinoklahoma9624
      @cherylinoklahoma9624 Год назад +5

      @Ben Hollar "Hi Hollar Family! Love you guys." So sad about the spraying, glad you found a clean source. I lost a very large potted
      Cherokee Purple tomato a few days after I transplanted it into a raised bed, that had tainted hay, that had rotted for at least 3 years on a compost pile.

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  Год назад +10

      It's horrible.

    • @sueyoung2115
      @sueyoung2115 Год назад

      @@davidthegood all part of the Evil plan to force people to eat lab created food, or pay incredible prices for it.

    • @a-k-jun-1
      @a-k-jun-1 3 месяца назад +3

      Bought hay to put around my plants in the garden at a local farm supply (Interior Alaska) and it killed my garden completely. Not realizing what happened, replanted and all those plants died too. Ended up not having a garden for 2 years, the plants didn't die the next year but didn't produce anything. Had to relocate the garden and start over. Pay attention and ask questions about everything when purchasing mulch or compost.

    • @chriswaters2327
      @chriswaters2327 24 дня назад

      I was lucky the first guy I asked had grown au naturel they'd just turn the field and grow beans for a year.

  • @patiencekates5975
    @patiencekates5975 Год назад +38

    You made my day! I saw the utility guys cutting and chipping and asked if they would dump it in my yard! A they did!!!

    • @tracycrider7778
      @tracycrider7778 Год назад +2

      Same ❤

    • @dogslobbergardens-hv2wf
      @dogslobbergardens-hv2wf Год назад +7

      It took years, but I *finally* made friends with an arborist crew that was happy to dump piles of fresh ramial woodchip on my place. I just happened to drive by and see them working, so I just stopped and asked. They also brought me a couple pickup loads of oak and maple chunks to cut up for firewood.
      That chance meeting was a very, very happy day for which I am still grateful.

    • @sueyoung2115
      @sueyoung2115 Год назад

      You were lucky! I found that the people cutting under the power lines on the road in Florida, selectively spray a number of evil, persistent chemicals in between cuttings . That stuff, turned into mulch, is what David is talking about. It will kill every kind of plant except "grass", and palmettos. I found out because I developed a rash from my well water a few weeks after the spraying. (The sprayers "didn't notice" that My well was right across the street) When I asked for a list of the spray ingredients, I found there was four different products in use! All aminopyralid.

  • @Green.Country.Agroforestry
    @Green.Country.Agroforestry Год назад +66

    We love composting hardwood mulch right under our feet .. the worms love it, the fungi love it. Having that pad of super absorbent organic matter beside each planting bed captures water and nutrients that run off, so once its done composting, we can just put it right back on top of the beds. Its like a gardening cheat code.

    • @wayfaringfarmer2724
      @wayfaringfarmer2724 Год назад +6

      Another great video !!

    • @SouthFloridaSunshine
      @SouthFloridaSunshine Год назад

      And you can inoculate it with your favorite edible fungi too.

    • @DoctorMandible
      @DoctorMandible Год назад +1

      If you're walking on it, that's decomposition - not compost.

    • @dogslobbergardens-hv2wf
      @dogslobbergardens-hv2wf Год назад +13

      @@DoctorMandible the end result doesn't care what you call it. 🙂 Walking on it just helps break up the material mechanically.
      I recently watched a vid from a fellow called Huw in the UK who has had very nice results composting right in the pathways between his beds. Ten months ago he basically made a new thick lasagna bed in the paths - cardboard, woodchip, grass clippings etc, and just let nature take its course with very minimal turning/flipping. A few weeks ago he harvested a surprisingly impressive amount of compost, and now he's just starting again the same way as before. Excellent results with not much effort, and the compost is already right there next to the bed or row where you need it.

    • @kathynix6552
      @kathynix6552 Год назад +6

      @@dogslobbergardens-hv2wf I watched that one too and thought it was an excellent idea

  • @Scotty.G
    @Scotty.G Год назад +70

    I run cardboard through a shredder for my compost, but I get so much of it I've started using it as a mulch too. Don't judge me. 😅

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  Год назад +29

      I've done it, and will do it again.

    • @cherylinoklahoma9624
      @cherylinoklahoma9624 Год назад +12

      ​​@@davidthegood Judged or shredded...??? 😂

    • @charitysmith5245
      @charitysmith5245 Год назад +7

      I saved some of my plants that were in too big pots to drag in my little greenhouse by mulching with shredded paper. Miniature moringa coming back from the roots! We had a 3 day cold snap below freezing here by savannah and I thought it was a goner.

    • @Scotty.G
      @Scotty.G Год назад +3

      @@cherylinoklahoma9624 Excellent question. 🤣

    • @randyman8984
      @randyman8984 Год назад +3

      They actually sell paper mulch now and potting soil, its called pitt moss. It's a company out of Pittsburgh. Wish it was more widely available. Seen it on a recent YT video

  • @allon33
    @allon33 Год назад +20

    I have Oregano under my Apple tree for 3 years now, perfect.

    • @Will-tm5bj
      @Will-tm5bj 28 дней назад +1

      Really? I happen to have an apple tree and oregano that I need to get out of a pot

  • @ChristopherPisz
    @ChristopherPisz Год назад +18

    I mulch with the pages of gardening books that are inferior to the books written by David the Good

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  Год назад +6

      A+++ comment

    • @dustrabbit4761
      @dustrabbit4761 Год назад +3

      This guy, composting someone else’s enemies.

    • @cherylinoklahoma9624
      @cherylinoklahoma9624 Год назад +1

      @Christopher Pisz: 😂😂😂 Hope you're not spending much (or any) money aquiring those inferior publications, and thank you for "taking out the trash" 😊

    • @Angelbach1995
      @Angelbach1995 Год назад +2

      🤣❤️

  • @whereswendy8544
    @whereswendy8544 Год назад +51

    Grass clippings are the best, all-round mulch and mixed with leaves, builds up soil tilth pretty quickly.

    • @FloridaGirl-
      @FloridaGirl- Год назад +17

      Grass and leaves=black gold ! 👍

    • @adamdille6031
      @adamdille6031 6 месяцев назад

      Absolutely agree!

    • @lynnharris7119
      @lynnharris7119 5 дней назад

      ​@@adamdille6031hi, I left 2 containers of grass clippings,leaves,sticks over winter. I'm in Michigan, it broke down to like a muck, it looks like almost thick mud , is this now dirt? I'm kinda embarrassed I should know,just want to be safe . Thank you for any help

    • @adamdille6031
      @adamdille6031 5 дней назад

      @@lynnharris7119 yes should be nice compost now

    • @gr8gardn
      @gr8gardn 2 дня назад

      Lynn Harris-it sounds like your mixed mulches are very wet and may need to dry out some before you use it. Try fluffing it up with a garden fork often until it is crumbly and can be spread on top of soil as mulch or mixed into soil as an awesome amendment

  • @TheHappyGardener
    @TheHappyGardener Год назад +52

    Good friends help you move Really good friends help you move your wood chip pile😂

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  Год назад +7

      I agree. One of my best friends volunteered.

  • @kristinwood5191
    @kristinwood5191 Год назад +51

    Thanks for this! Just what I needed to hear, I get caught up watching gardening videos and then thinking I need just the right things to make this work. Thanks for keeping things down to earth, affordable and simple.

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  Год назад +6

      You bet.

    • @nathonfrancis
      @nathonfrancis Год назад +4

      Ya bro, just a lil thinking
      never say die+pragmatism shows the solutions can be free and all around you. Good show dood.

  • @user-en3lu2ct5k
    @user-en3lu2ct5k Год назад +11

    There are four known persistent herbicides:
    Picloram (Dow AgroSciences, 1957),
    Clopyralid (Dow AgroSciences, 1987,
    Aminopyralid (Dow AgroSciences, 2005) and
    Aminocyclopyrachlor (DuPont, 2010).
    There are more than 150 retail products in the U.S.
    but these chemicals may appear on labels in slightly different variations
    making identification difficult.

  • @PushCoRednex
    @PushCoRednex Год назад +19

    A local, to me, mushroom farm sells their spent medium as compost, the medium they use is wheat straw.
    When I asked on their FB page if the straw had been treated with glyphosate, my comment was deleted, and I never got a response.
    I'm curious how much of the glyphosate is taken up by the mushrooms they grow.
    Anyway, great video and great job making people aware of potential hazards.

    • @betty8173
      @betty8173 Год назад +2

      I wondered about that too! One mushroom grower in Florida is using rice, on shelves, lots of different things going on, we need to know!

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  Год назад +6

      Yeah, it can have Grazon in it too. They sometimes add manure.

    • @tammiedyer3225
      @tammiedyer3225 Год назад +10

      To cheaply test the mushroom compost before you buy a whole load.
      Buy a small amount and plant green bean seeds in cups. Inspect for 2 weeks and if they are healthy you are good to go. Any damage to green beans makes it questionable.

    • @Katydidit
      @Katydidit Год назад +2

      That's a scary thought.

  • @skinnyWHITEgoyim
    @skinnyWHITEgoyim Год назад +20

    I'm planting a truckload of comfrey around my property this year. I plan on having enough comfrey and grass clippings to mulch every garden around lol. I have a 2 acre yard so I got tons of room to grow biomass. I collect tons of fallen leaves from the forest behind my house and then rake up tons of leaf mold from under the leaves. I have 2 compost bins made of pallets that are full of crumbly leaf mold and one full of compost from last year. I'm going all out this year on my gardens. I buried fish scraps and kitchen scraps in my garden rows all winter also. The amount of big ol fat worms in my garden now is amazing. My daughter caught like 20 from a hole six inches in diameter and property 8 inches deep. They've had about 8 inches of leaves on them since I harvested last fall. I'm not gonna compost much this year. I'm just going to mulch heavy and bury what I don't mulch with in the garden rows.

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  Год назад +6

      That's awesome.

    • @skinnyWHITEgoyim
      @skinnyWHITEgoyim Год назад +3

      @David The Good THE more organic matter the better. No such thing as too much unless you pile up a bunch of fresh green grass or something and get it hot.

    • @dogslobbergardens-hv2wf
      @dogslobbergardens-hv2wf Год назад

      @@skinnyWHITEgoyim A few years ago I bought six pieces of Bocking 14 comfrey root. Long story short, it has been the single most rewarding investment I ever made. I have now lost count of how many comfrey plants I have, and I sell some to others to get them started.
      Speaking of leaves from the forest (kind of), my favorite "kickstarter" for compost or soil mix is the gorgeous black, rich humus found under an old stump.

    • @debrabailey255
      @debrabailey255 Год назад +1

      I started with Russian Bocking 14 and love it for a fertilizing mulch and making a fertilizer tea. It also flowers so it’s good for the bees. If you have livestock you can use it for feed. I use it in making medicinal salves. I’ve planted it next to elderberry trees, a fig tree and a peach tree, and put a few in my garden. This variety does not spread unless you divide it. Such a valuable plant! This year I’ve grown some common comfrey, which does spread, from seed. (My bocking 14 was from root cuttings.) I have an area perfect for it which was formerly overgrown with English Ivy (ugh!!!!! Still fighting it.) If that area gets completely covered in comfrey I will be a happy Gardner!

    • @tracy419
      @tracy419 Месяц назад

      ​@@debrabailey255we have the bocking as well and it seems the hummingbirds like it.
      We got the because we were told it was invasive and we have a small yard, but I've just done some more reading about our area because we may be getting some land, and there are no warnings against it, so I'll be getting the self seeding variety if we move 🙂

  • @jeas4980
    @jeas4980 Год назад +6

    I am a persistent herbacide victim of giant proportions. I have 1 acre. Orchard in the front... garden beds and septic field in the back. I used to do "strawbale gardening" and I loved it... there was nothing I couldn't grow in a conditioned rotting strawbale until the one time I got treated strawbales labled organic. $7/bale 120 bale set up covering nearly my entire growing space. I paid over $900 to kill my garden space for 4 years. People say "they don't spray straw only hay!" Oh... but they do. This year I'm going through the expense of building 32" high metal and wood raised beds. It's about $450 for the materials to build an 8'x4' and a 12'x4' bed. I have spondylitis so I don't bend well... that's why I loved strawbale gardening so much. It takes about a 1/2 of a tree's tree's worth of logs and branches to fill the bottoms of 2... and 10 tonnes of Top soil and 24 bags of organic compost (tested) to fill them. We will have 5 of each size and 4 4x4' beds in between. All in all its going to cost $1000 per month for 5 months to build a useable garden space that will feed my family and keep the root systems of those plants away from the poisoned ground. The only areas that weren't poisoned are now low beds for tall and heavy sprawling crops like corn, okra, sunflower, melons and winter squash. We had to move things to get to unpoisoned ground. The EPA, FDA, CPA... they all know and continue to "discuss the situation" and do nothing. Proving, once again, the uselessness of government to do anything but steal your money. Right or left doesn't matter... poisons are bad is something every human should agree on.

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  Год назад +3

      This is incredible bad. And yes, right/left doesn't matter. They are all owned.

    • @savannahsmiles1797
      @savannahsmiles1797 4 дня назад +1

      I use to get straw that wasn't tainted and it was wonderful to use. After it grew my crops, I mixed it with pond sludge from my filter and put it on fruit trees and roses, they looked beautiful.

  • @Vunderbread
    @Vunderbread Месяц назад +2

    I'm impressed with your bravery, walking around barefoot on all those mulch piles. In my mulch, they're teeming with centipedes, ants, and sandsharks. I have to wear socks and shoes and do 'the shuffle', never leaving one foot planted more than a second or two.

  • @esthersmith3341
    @esthersmith3341 Год назад +9

    Oak leaves and a mulching mower work wonders. Mulch them small like coffee grounds by passing on them a bunch. Black gold.

  • @oreopaksun2512
    @oreopaksun2512 Год назад +9

    Like you hit "refresh"; you are back, better than ever, and highlighting all the resources we have at hand instead of $$$. Love it!

  • @pd8559
    @pd8559 Год назад +6

    I sifted my wood chips and started all my seeds this year in it.

  • @johnbuyers8095
    @johnbuyers8095 8 месяцев назад

    Love the chop and drop method, gives so much back👍👍👍

  • @tessakai
    @tessakai Год назад +1

    Thank you for the info David. I have recently gotten about 20 yards of wood chips from the free chip drop. I am using them around my trees, and pathways that I'm building. And, I'm composting a lot as well. In the late winter I emptied my Spring/summer 2022 compost bin that wasn't fully composted into my garden bed prep, and that had a ton of grass clippings from the last mowing. I'm growing more comfrey for chop and drop this year, and I'm fascinated with the Sun Hemp approach!! Your information is so important. Don't stop!!! XOXOXO

  • @janetmihoci6832
    @janetmihoci6832 Год назад +2

    Great tips, thanks David!

  • @captainron1960
    @captainron1960 Год назад

    He knows his stuff Ty David

  • @matthewberube5653
    @matthewberube5653 Год назад +8

    I compost my chicken bedding over 4-6 months. Pretty much apply compost once a month and the bits of left over chicken bedding, now sanitized, mulch very well and break down nicely over time. Usually a mix of oak leaves, the bedding, sticks, random chunks of wood, peanut shells, bits of egg shells chopped up sunflower stems. Stuff like that and the plants love it.

  • @charleneayers3608
    @charleneayers3608 Год назад +2

    I love the simplicity of your message. Been watching you for years and have “most” of your books. I grew up with growing in a farming family and use and agree with your practices. I refer you to all gardening newbies. Growing food, and even pretty stuff, shouldn’t be expensive.

  • @StubbsMillingCo.
    @StubbsMillingCo. Год назад +9

    South Carolina. Pine Straw… EVERYWHERE!!!! I also planted Winter Wheat as a cover crop this past fall and it’s been perfect to add to the row gardens (Wheat is my pathways) and it’s conviniently next to my Swamp Water😂😂😂

  • @s.gordonplatt8638
    @s.gordonplatt8638 Год назад +11

    You can always use wild hay. Our area is full of lowland hay leases that many farmers take advantage of, and even fresh bales are very cheap. I guess we're lucky.

    • @MrSymbolic7
      @MrSymbolic7 Месяц назад +1

      I have some in my Neighborhood and a 1/4 mile down the County Road the area is far to small to spray with chemicals it would cost more to spray than it's worth and I keep a very close eye on the property at all times and it's totally organic !

  • @j.b.6855
    @j.b.6855 Год назад +11

    I live in a town with maple tree lined streets. The leaves are an abundant free resource in the fall. Driving around on garbage day you can find 20 or more bags of them. I use it for mulch and two years ago I started making leaf mold because of watching videos about aminopyralid (persistent herbicide) tainted hay and compost in gardens. Well the first year I didnt make enough leaf mold. I mainly do container gardening and had a few 5 gallon sips left to amend when I ran out, so I bought some compost. It was contaminated. The tomato plants twisted and distorted. In the fall I built two 5'x5'x5' bins out of pallets for leaf mold. Never again. At least my problem was confined in a few 5 gallon buckets, and only killed 1 of the 4 varieties of tomato I grew. Lesson learned.

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  Год назад +6

      Yikes. People keep sharing these stories. The composting facilities should know better.

    • @Katydidit
      @Katydidit Год назад +3

      My garden was contaminated with " garden mix compost " that I purchased. It has taken 3 full years and more labor and ammendments than I care to mention to clear it out. I pray my garden is finally healed this season!!

    • @j.b.6855
      @j.b.6855 Год назад

      @@Katydidit I hope the nightmare ends for you.

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  Год назад +2

      Oh man.

  • @patrickhinojosa3542
    @patrickhinojosa3542 2 месяца назад

    Good job!
    Your comments are just as adamant as mine!
    This is the way the gardeners should see it , good choice making this particular video that’s why I subscribed!
    Because feeding us the reality of what it is, is truly what it is!

  • @annapry6470
    @annapry6470 Год назад +2

    Woohoo 🎉 I got my first taste of honey berry today. My four plants haven't produced in the past 2 years but one made it through the frost this year and is making a handful of fruit. Tastes like a tart grape to me. I also got apple and nectarine seeds to grow nicely and am starting the grocery row method ❤

  • @Stephen_Strange
    @Stephen_Strange Год назад

    DAVE ! I Really appreciate you and your time - THANK YOU!

  • @katieanneozarkhollowhomestead
    @katieanneozarkhollowhomestead Год назад +18

    I use tree company mulch in the paths and mowed oak leaves in my beds. The leaves do fantastic. Break down nice. Don’t seem to suck up nitrogen. Don’t have many weed seeds in them. Mowing them to chop them up is important. Whole leaves will either blow away or mat down.

    • @lindaspellman2108
      @lindaspellman2108 Год назад +3

      I'm using the matting properties to keep excess rain out of the compost. No more stinky soggy heap!

    • @fishingpinky3165
      @fishingpinky3165 Год назад

      I fill the bottoms of my big containers with them

  • @naomi2646
    @naomi2646 Год назад +12

    Its hard staying organic, I'm using my cover crop this year, planted a strip of alfalfa. Seeing a huge change in the garden this year, its the first year to bust out of the raised beds and go to in ground row gardening.
    Thank you David!
    Started a worm farm also.
    Some areas in the country may work for raised beds, but North central Texas gets hot and dry quick, anything up above ground burns up, including the gardner😅

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  Год назад +5

      Great work. Worms and alfalfa are both excellent soil fixers.

  • @RocketPipeTV
    @RocketPipeTV 6 месяцев назад +1

    I chop and drop since years and it works great.

  • @teslinjoe5938
    @teslinjoe5938 Год назад +2

    Excellent video. Thank you.

  • @mssavedin92
    @mssavedin92 2 дня назад

    I love the idea with the live mulch /grass etc path. Im gonna do that one. Thanks

  • @allisonhendrix6008
    @allisonhendrix6008 2 месяца назад

    I’m so excited because the power company was doing some major trimming in our neighborhood this week and I thought to ask for the chips!

  • @colleenrodamer9497
    @colleenrodamer9497 Год назад

    Thanks for all u do n thanks for the infor Many blessings from North Texas❤

  • @johnliberty3647
    @johnliberty3647 Год назад +3

    I created a mulch from my humus collecting from places where I am putting in a pond and a driveway. I cleared the brush and removing humus from the the thick root zone above the sand. I have this left over product of root balls. So I started mulching around my passion fruit (growing to make a shade only carport). I am hoping the roots have good bacterias that will was down into my passion fruit root zone as well as shade the ground and slowly decompose. Meanwhile I am removing the humus and roots from places where it would be troublesome for under a driveway or pond liner. Hope it turns out to make a decent mulch

  • @ellendavis9940
    @ellendavis9940 Год назад +1

    I love grass mulch. Love your videos

  • @johnsonr9
    @johnsonr9 Год назад

    Around here hardly anyone sprays hay but if you look at their pastures it is easy to tell.

  • @poodledaddles1091
    @poodledaddles1091 Год назад

    Good explanation about the problems with hay!

  • @HappyFarmsLa
    @HappyFarmsLa Год назад

    Fantastic video. I do the same with my grass. Circle mow. Ugh with the hay. 😞

  • @tealeaf4451
    @tealeaf4451 Год назад +1

    Amazing timing, as always! My cukes could use some mulch. I've been waiting for Chipdrop for 3 months but I have a ton of grass to cut.

  • @priestswife
    @priestswife Год назад +1

    I threw lentils from Walmart on some beds- really pretty as a cover crop

  • @carolfryer9494
    @carolfryer9494 Год назад

    Just makes sense to use wood chips with perennials where they have time to process long term. My neighbor gave me his grass clippings. He doesn't spray anything. And due to the erratic crazy weather trees have been dropping leaves all year so there's plenty of leaves.The grass to me is great for making fertilizer tea. Gonna start that this year, while expanding compost for my tiny garden. I did start some comfort last year for the plant feeding too.

  • @lagoya
    @lagoya Год назад +7

    My favorite mulch is pine straw, hands down

  • @belieftransformation
    @belieftransformation Год назад +1

    Thanks for teaching & entertaining 😅 great info!

  • @cherylinoklahoma9624
    @cherylinoklahoma9624 Год назад +7

    Thank you for this! It was so enjoyable and interesting and enlightening. To me, this is one of your best. I have been watching you for many years, (thanks to Herrick at Planet Whizbang). I stopped the video to thank GOD for blessing your family with this wonderful property and now blessing all of us who watch and learn as you develop YOUR homestead. Your books are great and very affordable. I have all except the ones pertaining to Florida. Thank you again, and GOD bless you all. (Your Sisters are so funny 😂)

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  Год назад +3

      Thank you. It's good to see you again.

  • @susannewilliams5809
    @susannewilliams5809 Год назад

    I have a 5 Gal Bucket Garden and I will use Straw to Mulch and Seaweed to Fertilize ... so far so good

  • @roserainy7586
    @roserainy7586 Год назад +1

    I literally just did this the last two days. Asked the hubby not to mow since the lawn came back alive, and now have more free mulch than I can use. You've been such an inspiration, thank you.

  • @rosewood513
    @rosewood513 Год назад

    I have been using grass clippings for many years. It is an amazing thing to use. When I moved to my new house, I got a gardener who mowed my lawn and my vegetable garden suffered terribly. I decided to have the gardener mow the front lawn only and I do the back so I can scoop up the grass and use it again. He would not scoop it up so I had to. My garden is recovering and my plants are beautiful. I never have weeds since I pile it on pretty thick... one thing only use grass from an organic lawn if you are growing food.

  • @j0t324
    @j0t324 9 месяцев назад +1

    You’re great!!! I’m loving binge watching your videos.
    Greetings from DownUnder 🤗

  • @greatscaledoneames9869
    @greatscaledoneames9869 Год назад

    Great video! I've been using grass clippings for years in my garden. I would add one thing, rocks. It's great for pathways and can look sharp around ornamentals (and the deer seem to hate it!)

  • @NgKMun
    @NgKMun Год назад +4

    Agree totally with David. In particular, the part about persistent pesticide. I mixed about 2 l of my urine in the standard 1cu m compost as a starter. Composted for about 2 months till temperature dropped to ambient. Applied the compost to my plants and they showed the typical crinkling of leaves, lack of fruit, reduced growth, etc after a few wks. Plants most affected were papaya, tomato, and several broad leaf weeds. Deadly gift from the herbicide companies!

    • @sueyoung2115
      @sueyoung2115 Год назад

      Lipomyces cononencoa is a type of yeast which supposedly will break down the grazon. Back in 2020, a biologist who was a commenter on David's forum gave us this info. after we were discussing the problem.

  • @TheSHOP411
    @TheSHOP411 Год назад +4

    Been using grass clippings for years. It is an essential part of my gardening

  • @barbara798
    @barbara798 Год назад

    Thank you again another good show

  • @summerhill_homestead
    @summerhill_homestead Год назад

    Great video, as usual!

  • @chadl9218
    @chadl9218 Год назад +3

    I've started most of those and notice a huge improvement in soil. I've even used paper shreds

  • @judithstorck5195
    @judithstorck5195 Год назад

    We live in SW Arizona - just Desert - no grass. We have to buy hay & alfalfa hay to use for mulch. We used to get wood chips but we had to load it ourselves & since we are in our late 70s -we are unable to do that anymore. Will be using cardboard & the straw. Yes we also use weeds under the cardboard. Thank you.

  • @highdeserthangout1642
    @highdeserthangout1642 Год назад +1

    Great video. Thanks for the info - I need to mulch.

  • @ck-4203
    @ck-4203 Год назад

    Sometimes I use a tool called a grass whip to cut weeds and long wet grass for mulch. It looks and swings like a golf club and has a two-sided serated head so works with a forehand and back
    -handed stroke.

  • @SouthFloridaSunshine
    @SouthFloridaSunshine Год назад +3

    I tried to use larger Moringa branch cuttings under my soil, but it is like a Frankenstein branch. So I maybe need to rent a mulcher for when we start over with that tree because I think my soil would love it! (Got a fence after planting the Moringa). Would love a paw paw tree, or Mango that does not get fire blight. Like the idea of cover crop!

  • @andrewdillard5961
    @andrewdillard5961 Месяц назад +1

    When you threw that little fit I immediately subscribed lol love your stuff so far.

  • @championhomestead6273
    @championhomestead6273 Год назад +2

    I let my yard re-wild this spring to use as green mulch. My husband hated it but I have used every bit and I cut some daily to throw to our chickens too.

    • @katella
      @katella Год назад

      The birds and bees and all of nature thank you

  • @mysticmeadow9116
    @mysticmeadow9116 6 дней назад

    Our yard is about an acre. I mow it with a self propelled 22" push mower with a bag. I take the bags and spread them around the base of my trees making sure not to pile it on the bark. Trees are growing huge!

  • @PartTimePermies
    @PartTimePermies 11 месяцев назад

    my best year in my annual garden was when I took my fall leaves the fall before into my garden and planted directly into it in the spring. It was a complete jungle garden that year. They had all winter to start breaking down, but still had enough to hold moisture the next year. Only downfall is that it brought in a bunch of poke seeds and a few tree nuts... Not a huge problem, just annoying when poke and trees was growing where I didn't want it.

  • @DDWASH9595
    @DDWASH9595 Год назад +2

    Left for work in Tennessee for almost a year and now that I’m back I’m mulching the watermelons with all the weeds and cardboard from moving

  • @bcraigphelps2649
    @bcraigphelps2649 7 месяцев назад

    I bought a bag of potting mix at Walmart this year and was shocked that the seedlings struggled in it and died. First time to experience that! I will use the organic bag for now on. Great video!

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  7 месяцев назад

      It is crazy how bad things are getting

  • @AHomeIsHaven
    @AHomeIsHaven Год назад

    Thank you David

  • @juliekraft4102
    @juliekraft4102 Год назад +17

    I use cypress mulch in my pathways,but that is just my preference. It helps to deter bugs,ECT. They don't seem to like it.🤗

    • @inchristalone25
      @inchristalone25 Год назад +1

      Tisk Tisk, cypress isn't sustainable.

    • @juliekraft4102
      @juliekraft4102 Год назад +3

      @@inchristalone25 I don't cut and shred it myself.🤣

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  Год назад +11

      I dunno, there is tons of cypress around here.

    • @Katydidit
      @Katydidit Год назад +1

      Love Cypress mulch for deterring bugs! Every year I look at my Cypress and think... one fine day!!

    • @Car-jy8pw
      @Car-jy8pw Год назад +9

      Cedar works that way too. Deters slugs pretty well.

  • @jeanmuehlfelt7942
    @jeanmuehlfelt7942 Год назад +3

    I like to tell people that I love Junk Mail. It's the 'deer in the headlights' look from them that makes me smile. 🙂 I take the junk mail and either use it as a base weed barrier under chips/grass clippings, or I shread it and spread it sparingly in my large compost bins for the carbon content. Win ... win.

    • @dogslobbergardens-hv2wf
      @dogslobbergardens-hv2wf Год назад

      My only issue with using junk mail, bills etc is picking out all the glossy stuff and those annoying little plastic windows on some envelopes.

    • @jeanmuehlfelt7942
      @jeanmuehlfelt7942 Год назад +1

      @@dogslobbergardens-hv2wf Agreed!

    • @Stacey0909
      @Stacey0909 Год назад +1

      ​@@dogslobbergardens-hv2wf And staples!😮

  • @bentimberfalling
    @bentimberfalling Год назад +3

    I just started working for a tree service so now I can get as many loads of wood chips as I want!

  • @verone272
    @verone272 6 дней назад

    I have tons of autumn leaves I think I will use that! :)

  • @JulieHiltbrunner
    @JulieHiltbrunner Год назад

    Hi David!! Good to see you!

  • @carterscustomrods
    @carterscustomrods Год назад +10

    I have a lot of green stripe golden Hawaiian bamboo. There's a constant leaf fall has made the best mulch I've ever used.
    I can also run the leaves over with my mower, and it becomes better than Peet moss for trapping moisture and giving a slower drain.

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  Год назад +2

      That is awesome!! We used to get Bambusa vulgaris leaves in big piles in the tropics.

    • @carterscustomrods
      @carterscustomrods Год назад +1

      @David The Good here in your old stomping grounds of Florida, (Clearwater) I've been propagating them like crazy. Bamboo is my favorite ... my only issue is they grow so large, so fast. Last fall, prior to hurricanes, they were coming out at 6"-8" diameters and growing to 20ft in less than a month. But then, a good heavy wind breaks them. Hurricane demolished them. I'm going to try watering less in hopes they can grow a bit slower, and stronger... but not sure if it will work. Add a bit of borax or shellac to water maybe ??? 🤣 🤣 🤣

  • @savvy2639
    @savvy2639 2 месяца назад

    hemp does draw out a lot of impurities from the ground - i am unsure if it stores in or somehow neutralizes it, but i do know people are planting it to fix chemicals in ground. it is a big problem to avoiding the chemicals and trying to stay organic. thanks for all the good composting tips.👍🏻

  • @dancarter475
    @dancarter475 Год назад +1

    I use sawgrass have tons of it growing in the yard from previous owners

  • @feralkid1879
    @feralkid1879 7 дней назад

    We feed the birds sunflower seeds over the winter. I hang the feeder over a big tray to catch the shells. I till about 8 gallons of shells into the garden every spring. They break down fast and really appear to feed the soil well.

  • @lauramccament1381
    @lauramccament1381 Год назад

    Thanks for the tip on using weeds!!! I don't have any grass but I do have weeds !

  • @sandgroperwookiee65
    @sandgroperwookiee65 Год назад +2

    G'day David 👍 a question I've been wanting to know for ages is can I use chopped up wormwood in my compost?
    I managed to buy three young seedlings that I wanted around for my chickens and now they are a nice big hedge. Love it because it grows in sand and takes no care at all and even in our hot summers here in Australia, I hardly water them at all 👍👍
    Thanks cobber!

  • @MissChievousRN
    @MissChievousRN Год назад +1

    I shred brown paper bags, paper packing, boxes, non glossy paper, thru an old paper shredder and use it for chicken coop bedding, rabbit bedding, mulch....

  • @freedomisknowledge777
    @freedomisknowledge777 Год назад +11

    Beyond meat is super cheap now. Would that be safe to use as mulch?

    • @Freedommjw
      @Freedommjw Год назад

      😂 good one!

    • @freedomisknowledge777
      @freedomisknowledge777 Год назад +4

      @@Disabled.Megatron Yes I know. Plus more estrogen than a man should have in a lifetime. Oh and grown from cancer cells. Yummy

  • @teresaV
    @teresaV Год назад

    We used to live in Ozark! Still have family there and in Dothan.😊

  • @jennexxer
    @jennexxer 2 месяца назад +1

    I used straw from TSC for chicken bedding, deep litter style. Well, after adding compost to garden, plants barely produced any food at all for 3 years. Im just now getting my soil microbes back.

  • @FloridaGrowing
    @FloridaGrowing Год назад

    Straw is my perfect vegetable garden mulch, although the snakes love my mulch too. I'm here in Central sunny Florida, I really love your utube videos😊

  • @DJ-uk5mm
    @DJ-uk5mm Год назад +2

    I’m experimenting with sewing, my pathways with a mix of white clover , alfalfa, and vetch and arugula The white clover and vetch and alfalfa are nitrogen fixers I then mow the paths and they add nitrogen into the soils ton feed the beds each side

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  Год назад

      I love those types of seed mixes - good luck.

  • @cbak1819
    @cbak1819 12 дней назад

    Good tidings David, what is best for slugs and rolly pollies.....horrid this year.

  • @intivelez4123
    @intivelez4123 Год назад +4

    Needed this video. Im new to gardening and im struggling with weeds 😪

    • @timhoward7486
      @timhoward7486 Год назад +3

      He's correct, weeds aren't always a bad thing. They are opportunistic and will mine nutrients, stop erosion, feed beneficial insects, make mulch, but don't let too many go to seed. As I was taught, technically speaking a weed is a plant out of place so a rose in the middle of a cotton field is weed.

    • @intivelez4123
      @intivelez4123 Год назад

      @@timhoward7486 thanks 🙏

  • @debbannon354
    @debbannon354 Год назад +1

    Absolutely right about that bad hay! A few years ago, we got loads of aged manure from a local-ish dairy farm and tilled it into the garden spot. It killed everything that we put in the garden that year. It took us a while to figure out what was going on and some investigating to find out that the hay had been sprayed with that toxic poison. Not only our garden but the gardens of three other families that we shared that manure with were killed. Hard lesson learned there for all of us. I can't help but wonder about those dairy products....
    David the Good, I like your hat a lot (this sun is brutal and feels 'stronger' than it used to be years ago?); where can we find hats like yours??
    Thanks so much for all of your knowledgeable videos.
    Best wishes!!

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  Год назад

      I am so sorry. I got this hat from Tractor Supply, I think.

  • @kylemcgee2951
    @kylemcgee2951 Год назад +11

    I work in a wood shop so my mulch is planer shavings. Mostly maple. Free and abundant, everything gets covered in planer shavings. It is heavy carbon so I try not to turn much into veggie gardens.

    • @kamaliancirranoush1916
      @kamaliancirranoush1916 Год назад +3

      Question for you, do you use plywood shavings, or only solid wood shavings? There is a cabinet shop near me with an abundance of shavings, but I worry about the glue from the plywood. I’ve thought about composting it, or just using for paths. What are your thoughts? TIA

    • @dogslobbergardens-hv2wf
      @dogslobbergardens-hv2wf Год назад +1

      @@kamaliancirranoush1916I would def avoid plywood in the garden and compost piles. The most common glue used in plywood is made of urea and formaldehyde.
      Perhaps if you bring the cabinet makers a box of donuts or something, they'd be willing let you know when they're working strictly with normal solid wood so you can come get the shavings.

  • @jeancampbell4341
    @jeancampbell4341 9 месяцев назад

    Thanks David

  • @thatguychris5654
    @thatguychris5654 Год назад +4

    Free and safe hay: I cut mine from areas that were cleared for new stores and fast food joints. These places tend to get cleared then sit for 1 to 3 years waiting to be sold, all the while tons of tall grass grows up. As long as it's not fenced off, I go in during the winter and scythe it all up.

    • @davidthegood
      @davidthegood  Год назад +2

      That is epic.

    • @debravictoria7452
      @debravictoria7452 Год назад

      I fed my horse hay. She passed in 2018. Should the poop be okay now to use as mulch?

  • @ispringle
    @ispringle Год назад +1

    I reckon that bit on the hay depends a lot on where you are and where you buy hay. I have been burned on buying hay that was sprayed, but I also know that most hay around here is from fields that have never seen herbicides or pesticides.

  • @lynnjasmine3216
    @lynnjasmine3216 Год назад

    Great one! Sad I missed my 2 favorite YT guys at the festival. Unable to go.

  • @birchmoonfarm101
    @birchmoonfarm101 Год назад

    Living mulch right next to your rows! Brilliant! Or use comfrey!

  • @KeefBox
    @KeefBox Год назад

    youre the best man. ive been enjoying your content for a good your and couldnt believe i hadnt subscribed. so i subscribed today. wooooo. forreal though youre very informative and funny while ya do it