Massive Soil Improvement Using Leaf Mulch

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
  • !!!2021 UPDATE HERE!!! • Autumn Leaf Mulch 2021...
    Leaf Mulch is one of the best amendments you can do to your soil. No matter whether vegetable garden or flower garden, you need to layer it with leaves!
    In this video I cover the basics of leaf mulch, some do's and don'ts, and lay out all the benefits. Then, I will show you in detail exactly what I did to my vegetable garden in the Fall of 2019, and how much it has improved the soil one year later.
    This was the absolute best improvement I've ever done to my garden soil. It was easy, and free. My vegetable plants appeared to utilize the broken down leaves from the day they were planted. Although it did take approximately 1 year for all leaves to break down.
    2021 Update - • Autumn Leaf Mulch 2021...
    2022 Update - • Autumn Leaf Mulch 2022...
    Some good references for this video:
    Total guide to fall clean up - growitbuildit....
    101 Items you can compost:
    growitbuildit....
    How hot does compost need to get to kill weed seeds -
    growitbuildit....
    My DIY Tomato Cages - low cost, strong, sturdy, and they store better than conventional cages
    growitbuildit....
    See our collection of videos on how to improve your garden -
    • How to Determine Soil ...
    The reasons to use leaf mulch, with references:
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    How to make a compost pile:
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Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @davidthegood
    @davidthegood 3 года назад +154

    Very good video - you covered this excellently and the results are inarguable. Thank you - I will re-share this one.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +10

      Thank you so much David! I really appreciate it. I've watched your videos plenty of times, so that means a lot coming from you. Thank you!

    • @cody481
      @cody481 Год назад

      Have you found an uper limit?

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  Год назад +1

      @cody481 I have not found a limit. Each year I get big improvements. I published an update recently

  • @GardenDocSC
    @GardenDocSC 2 года назад +157

    Great video. When I was a youngster in Maryland, we had a tomato patch, maybe 4 feet by 50 feet, along the backside of the house. This was back in the 70's-80's. Heavy heavy red clay soil on our 4 acres. Every fall my father would make me rake leaves, for hours and hours on end. We'd do it on Sunday, after church. We'd pile those leaves onto the tomato patch and water them. Then we'd turn them into the soil, yes using a shovel. We'd pile them a foot thick. My father would have me double dig, if you know what that is. Then in early May, we'd go out and turn the top layer, single dig. The soil got darker and darker every year (over the course of 15 years of my child labor lol). We grew the very best tomatoes. Always Burpees Big Boy. Never added any other amendments. No fertilizer, no lime, no calcium. It's not until you're older, that you realize how smart your parents were. What I wouldn't give for those delicious Maryland tomatoes now.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  2 года назад +17

      Thank you for sharing Doc! It is amazing - how much out parents/grandparents, etc knew. If you watch 'gardening trends' today you would wonder just how all those people back in the day managed to have gardens without special amendments, soil starter...etc. One set of my grandparents didn't go to school past 8th grade, but they were successful farmers / gardeners!

    • @d.leighannbatemon3192
      @d.leighannbatemon3192 2 года назад +1

      What is double dig and single dig? Our soil is pretty clay-like, but I want a vegetable garden so bad!! I'm excited to give this a shot!

    • @Tallahass33
      @Tallahass33 Год назад

      Usually people that go to church don’t work on Sunday

    • @Tallahass33
      @Tallahass33 Год назад

      Ur supposed to rest

    • @GardenDocSC
      @GardenDocSC Год назад +5

      @@d.leighannbatemon3192 Double dig is when you go in rows, turning a first dig to the side, then going down a second time, turning that to the side also. Basically it means digging twice as deep and bringing the deepest soil to the top.

  • @derekcox6531
    @derekcox6531 3 года назад +62

    I take my battery powered leaf blower around to green spaces in my city during the fall months and just scoop all the leaves I can. (Much to the horror of my teenager) but it’s a free resource and I’m more than happy to tell anyone who inquires about my activity,that I’m gathering leaves for my garden.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +9

      That is awesome Derek. I've been so tempted to rob a powerline cut of all the leaves people dump there. I'm just worried about some of the other stuff that people dump there - might have some nasty chemicals or invasive seeds hiding in those leaves.

  • @chrisschwartz4037
    @chrisschwartz4037 2 года назад +70

    My family has always, my grandfather taught my Dad and he taught me, to put grass clippings under our trees. This was done in a circular manner to about 4-5 ft. out from tree trunk. This was done all summer long. About September the grass clippings were raked up into a circular mound surrounding the trees. When the leaves fell the yard was mowed and everything bagged was placed into the center of the grass dam. Having been mowed the leaves were so heavy the wind did not blow them out of the circle. Every year we have had new black soil under our trees, and they love it. Snow Ball tree goes crazy every year. In the spring, snows have pounded grass clippings and leaves down to nothings and time to start over. The circle of grass clippings prevents weeds from growing under the trees and also you don't mow so close to trunk of tree to damage the tree bark.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  2 года назад +3

      Sounds like a perfect system Chris

    • @Doc1855
      @Doc1855 2 года назад

      We use Alph Alpha as mulch in and around our garden, small orchard and compost pile.

    • @Runner466
      @Runner466 Год назад +1

      Great idea! Thank you. I have fruit trees, 2 peaches, 3 apples. I will have to try this next year. I love my fruit and this should keep the trees healthy.

    • @christinaoliveryoung6019
      @christinaoliveryoung6019 Год назад +4

      @@Doc1855 😹 I had to read that twice and then say It out loud to realize it was alfalfa lol love it!

  • @thrive-like-a-viking
    @thrive-like-a-viking 3 года назад +149

    this is one of the best videos I've seen on the subject.... the large span of time covered and the direct comparisons really give a clear cut illustration of this process .... thank you for your time...

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +4

      You're very welcome Nate. And thank you very much for the compliment! It is much appreciated.

    • @bryantherocker
      @bryantherocker 3 года назад +1

      @@growitbuildit Hi, nice video ..can i just get fresh shredded leaves and put them in a plastic bucket with a drain hole, leave it outside... and after a few months, I put in on top of the soil of my ornamental plants as natural fertilizer ?

    • @gelwood99
      @gelwood99 2 года назад

      @@bryantherocker Shred the leaves and apply them like any mulch. I have done this for years and have the blackest soil in my ornamental beds. Don't waste the time with heavy buckets, the worms will be happy to do it for you with no extra work involved. Our city has a leaf drop off and they have been closed for 2 years, I just got 4 bucket loads of black gold, almost totally composted leaf mulch for my new garden I am making in the front yard and it is fabulous stuff. They already did the work for me. Maybe your town has one also and a bargain at $5 a scope.

    • @GaiaCarney
      @GaiaCarney Год назад

      Nate Muri - I agree! The results are clear and you can’t beat free! 🍂🍂🍂

  • @pthomps1111
    @pthomps1111 3 года назад +50

    Yes! Thanks for this content! I did this very thing with some extras this fall as a grand experiment to improve my crappy garden soil. I did it for several reasons: 1) free, 2) deep mulch system has been a great garden method, 3) composting in place, 4) to improve my soil with organic matter, improve tilth, 5) to bring more worms and 6) to suppress weeds over the winter. Because I have really poor soil, I chose to lasagna layer the good stuff. I had cardboard already down, added a layer of straw/hay over the summer, a layer of rotten horse manure, a layer of chicken manure mixed with hay and finally, a layer of leaves. All combined, it's about 6 inches deep and though it's only been a couple months, I can already see tons of worms at work. Very encouraging! I collected everything for free, so with any luck, 2021 will be an exceptional garden year!

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +6

      Outstanding Amber. I had the biggest improvement from doing just the leaves. It sounds like you're going to have a ton of veggies next year with what you've done.

    • @helenejohansen3866
      @helenejohansen3866 2 года назад +2

      Hello there :)
      Im curious to know if the horsemaneure made you any troublles with increased weeds? I was planning to do a similar thing, but im not sure i dare. Best wishes and thank you very much ;)

    • @josephcernansky1794
      @josephcernansky1794 2 года назад

      @@helenejohansen3866 I've used horse manure and they don't eat weeds!!! very little weed issues. I "steal" all my neighbors leaves and shred them into litter. Add manure, dirt, nitrogen fertilizer, wet the dry stuff real good, and turn the pile every couple months. I either use the product next year as mulch or till it into the soil in fall before it's time to collect leaves again. The garden gets all sorts of stuff into it.....What was originally yellow-brown silty clayey shale is now rich black loam. Mother Nature takes time ...if you don't have the time and plenty of money...hire a nursery to dig up all the crappy dirt and backfill with sifted organic loam soil........so who here on RUclips watching, reading and typing has that kind of money? Elon, is that you? Wanna hire me as your personal gardener? LOL

  • @gioknows
    @gioknows Год назад +1

    I took my truck and filled it with leaf bags people were throwing away last year and dumped them in a pile in my backyard and they have produced a ton of free compost for me. Cheers from Ottawa, Canada 🍁

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  Год назад

      Nice haul! I love putting leaves to good use rather than a landfill.

  • @CatsMeow14
    @CatsMeow14 2 года назад +13

    This is a great video about how to use leaf mulch. One thing a lot of people don't think about is that many beneficial insects lay eggs / overwinter in the leaf layer, so shredding them can hurt your local ecosystem in the springtime. We always rake the leaves into our garden areas, but I only shred a small portion of them.

  • @madammim694
    @madammim694 2 года назад +1

    you see how beautiful the forest floor is, year after year of building up leaves is perfect.

  • @rosewood513
    @rosewood513 3 года назад +5

    I have been using leaf mulch since my first real veg garden back in 1979, I still is the best fertilizer money doesn't buy. :) Thank you. I just finally got up the verve to ask my new neighbor if I could scoop up their leaves in their back yard. Tomorrow is the day..

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад

      Couldn't agree more. And thank you for sharing your experience!

    • @lorrainemosby1645
      @lorrainemosby1645 2 года назад

      Smiles, smiles,smiles

  • @richardsabo6213
    @richardsabo6213 8 месяцев назад +1

    I have the same feelings when Autumn begins. I eagerly await “Leaf Harvesting” season.

  • @Nick-me7ot
    @Nick-me7ot 10 месяцев назад +1

    So important for people to know about organic matter & its relationship with water retention. Always happy to see people sharing this knowledge.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  10 месяцев назад

      100% agree - it's almost like adding organic matter can do no wrong for soil.

  • @offbaseify
    @offbaseify 2 года назад +14

    Good video. Leaves are a great source of nutrients as well as a conditioner for your soil. I do till my leaves into the soil at the end of the season. I also add a large amount of grass clippings to offset the nitrogen depletion. Grass clippings act as a slow release fertilizer close to the equivalent of a 4-1-2 fertilizer. During the spring and summer months, I lay grass clippings around all my plants. This virtually eliminates any weeds, adds nitrogen and moisture to the soil, and in the cooler nights of spring adds a little warmth to the plants. As the clipping dry, they create a weed barrier and block the summer sun from drying out the soil. Leaves are great, but leaves combined with grass clippings are the one two punch. After five years at a new location, my garden soil is pitch black and easily tillable to 12 inches. I was taught this method by my late father who grew up in the depression and had gardens his whole life. You'll be surprised by the output of produce from your plants. Plus it's great to spend only a few minutes a day picking out a stray weed here and there.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  2 года назад +1

      The weed barrier aspect was such an awesome benefit. It does two jobs at once.

    • @daleglenny8253
      @daleglenny8253 2 года назад +3

      Consider rethinking tilling your soil. There is so much evidence that tilling breaks the beneficial mycelia threads that symbiotically nourish microbes and plants, and that no til/ no dig produces higher yields.

    • @offbaseify
      @offbaseify 2 года назад +1

      @@daleglenny8253 Farmers have been tilling for generations. Studies have shown that a no till method is more expensive and does not benefit the planting of most crops. Some crops like corn actually suffer.

    • @TheHealthLife
      @TheHealthLife Год назад +1

      @@offbaseify and this is why our earths topsoil is shit. They have to add fertilizers to have stuff grow. Also, back yard gardens are not mass production businesses. No till is the future, especially as you get older. Look up back to eden gardening. All about covering the soil.

    • @offbaseify
      @offbaseify Год назад

      @@TheHealthLife Money drives everything when it comes to mass production. I will say that in my 60 plus years of gardening my method has worked flawlessly. I would challenge the output and soil quality of my garden against any no till garden. Maybe read some of the other posts that also recommend tilling.

  • @jasonnefzger6838
    @jasonnefzger6838 2 года назад +10

    I’ve done this for years in my Sandy soil, the results have been incredible. It’s crazy how fast that deep pile of leaves disappear

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  2 года назад +9

      It is shocking. And to think how much money is spent purchasing mushroom compost, fertilizer, and all sorts of other amendments to correct infertile soil!

    • @lorrainemosby1645
      @lorrainemosby1645 2 года назад +4

      I have sandy, rocky soil, so I look forward to the incredible vegetables next year.
      Thank you for your comment!!!

    • @savannahsmiles1797
      @savannahsmiles1797 Год назад +1

      yeppers it works

  • @gerhardbraatz6305
    @gerhardbraatz6305 3 года назад +26

    I always get my neighbors leaves in the fall. It has made a huge difference in my garden soil. It pays to shred them up with a mower.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +1

      I couldn't agree more Gerhard. The results are excellent.

    • @caseG80
      @caseG80 3 года назад +1

      Shreeding provides more surface area

    • @mauricedavis2905
      @mauricedavis2905 3 года назад +3

      I have been doing the same for years now this year I found a place around our lake where the geese poop. I collect the poop and till it in with the leaves🤫

    • @flash_flood_area
      @flash_flood_area 3 года назад +3

      @@mauricedavis2905 I had started collecting neighborhood leaves this fall, and dumping them in my backyard. My chickens have been both breaking them down and adding their poop to the mix.

    • @flatsville1
      @flatsville1 3 года назад +2

      No geese or chickens? Pee in a bottle then pour the urine on your leaves until the hard freeze hits.

  • @mattknowscomics
    @mattknowscomics 3 года назад +6

    So I just went out into my raised bed to see how badly I ruined it last year. I had tons of little runner roots that were growing up into the bed last year. i thought I was going to have to remove it all and fill it with garden soil. It sits about 30" tall. I filled it with sticks some rotten, some green, leaves and some leftover potting mix to fill the bed last year. So in October I just piled some left over leaves in and figured I would check it in spring.Because it really didn't do a whole lot for me...I thought. But after your video, I moved over the leaves I put in and this smoke started pouring out. It was so warm and dark and full of those white flecks in there. I was thinking of taking this stuff to spread out over my beds this year. Would have never thought of it without your video. TONS of info here - great video!!

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад

      Sounds like you had some hot composting going on in your leaves! It's funny - my leaves have really compressed. But I had some 'bumps' out there that were sticking up by about a foot. I went and knocked them down just after Christmas, and they were hot composting still.
      I'm glad you found this video helpful Matt - and good luck this year!

  • @TheBushdoctor68
    @TheBushdoctor68 3 года назад +21

    Great video! Glad I'm not the only nutcase collecting leaves when others are busy trying to get rid of them.
    I use them in my compost bin, uncut, and in that case you really want to mix them well with other material, otherwise they tend to form an oxygen deprived layer. (Turning the bin fixes all of that in one go though).
    One more tip would be to keep an eye on seeds when collecting leaves. There are some birches next to my garden, and they drop a huge amount of small seeds, therefor I don't collect in that area.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +2

      That's a good point regarding Birch seeds. These are maples, so no issue there as all the seeds drop in Spring.

  • @davidschmidt270
    @davidschmidt270 3 года назад +11

    I've got garden eyes now too... it's kinda funny how you start to change and see things differently...James prigione , think that's how spell it describes it too when he goes out looking for stuff

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +2

      I know what you mean David. I've even taken kitchen scraps from my in-laws to compost. I just view all of that as wasted resources when it is thrown out in the regular trash.

  • @mercilessdragon5474
    @mercilessdragon5474 3 года назад +23

    I live in a sandy loam area. The sand layer is also shallow.
    Happen to come across a mere mention of the benefits of using wood ash to improve the quality of clay soils.
    Wood ash breaks the components that makes clay a sticky clump.
    Last year I dug out a 16'× 4' raised bed.
    I put aside the dug up dirt to load the trench with rotten wood then layered the wood with cardboard. All of this was done to establish a tall supportive base for my raised bed.
    I had saved about 50 lb bag of wood ash from a wood burning stove.
    The soil from the trench was mostly clay. So I applied a generous helping of wood ash as I refilled my raised bed. On the final layers I started to add compost with the dirt. 4months later as I pulled the spent vegatables plants off I noticed a big improvement . The clay had turned into a great loamy soil. The compost helped but as you showed here. The change din not reach deep enough.
    This year try using wood ash on your garden plot.
    Wood ash is high in potassium which promotes root growth.
    Just sharing.

    • @pthomps1111
      @pthomps1111 3 года назад +2

      I had no idea that wood ash improves clay soil. I have mostly clay soil in my garden, so I will use more wood ash on my garden. I've also added lots of leaves and other organic material layers in the fall, so I'll add the ash on top. Thanks!

    • @parkiescreation77
      @parkiescreation77 3 года назад +1

      I did read about wood ash and I had added some to my soil I’m doing an experiment with

    • @Bob46374
      @Bob46374 3 года назад +1

      I think it will effect ph levels. It’s not good in an alkaline soil

    • @apteryx7080
      @apteryx7080 2 года назад +1

      Have you seen the Survival Gardening channel video on making terra preta? I feel you might find his experience interesting, the follow-up and results are staggering.

    • @smas3256
      @smas3256 Год назад

      @@Bob46374 ph is something sold as: we need to buy this and that to have success. Once the ash is watered the nutrients go into the soil and the plant uptakes what it need. I'd think that ashes should be added for strong roots. How much and how often you can do the research for your soil condition. Older studies have been proven wrong.

  • @martinphilip8998
    @martinphilip8998 2 года назад +2

    I live in central Illinois and we have fantastic soil. My home was built in 1955 and the developer (my wife’s father) did not scrape off the native soil. I’ve done a lot to build even better soil. You don’t find clay until you get down 10 inches. They say it takes a century to build an inch of topsoil when it happens naturally. I don’t have that kind of time. I’m 67 but I still managed to plant 1000 tulip bulbs this fall. The leaves on top really helps the worms. It gives them a reason to come up and eat.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  2 года назад +1

      Couldn't agree more about the leaves Martin. That is great that you were able to keep the native soil. So many (pretty much all) places are left with inorganic orange dirt.

    • @josephcernansky1794
      @josephcernansky1794 2 года назад +1

      I use to live in the St. Louis suburbs and drive thru southern Illinois......I wish I could afford a truck or train...I'd dig up all that fantastic black earth I saw there and haul it back to the mountains where I live!! I actually saw them excavating and trucking it out of a pit (I guess to bag and sell it). They were digging at least 20' down and still rich black earth!!!

  • @1voluntaryist
    @1voluntaryist 2 года назад +2

    I started organic gardening in the mid '50s. I had to compost leaves because they didn't break down readily and kept soil from breathing. I had no way to shred. In the '90s I bought an electric vacuum/shredder, 15-1. It was so much better/quicker than composting. And my garden grew better, with less weeding when using shredded leaf mulch. I learned from experience: SHREDDED LEAF MULCH is the best soil builder/feeder. Don't garden without it.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  2 года назад +1

      I couldn't agree more Don. It's the best thing I've done for my soil.

  • @alancarlyon3928
    @alancarlyon3928 Год назад +2

    My garden is surrounded by oak tree's, every November all the way through to April I am raking up leaves shelling/s /twigs every day ! I am a pensioner, so it keeps me active! I started storing all these leaves in a deep 8x8 pit and it took 3 years before they decomposed which is really such a long time! But yeah I gave all the decomposed leaf mould to my earth/gardens and I had a great show this summer! I stopped storing the leaf's now as the time factor is so long and The heap of leaves attracted flies which made their way into the house! My wife likes having the windows open, so she nagged me about the composed heap, so now I make my own fertiliser from fruit skins, egg shells, peelings/weeds etc! It stinks, but the bucket is away in a corner of the garden far from our house! I fed my tomato's and carrots, strawberries with it and they loved it, great crop. Now if needing a top up for my soil, I collect earth (leaf mould ) that has turned into compost from the woods near by, just remove the top layer and dig down! As you said - it's free!

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  Год назад

      Leaf mold is awesome stuff. It's amazing what we can do with our own resources

  • @normanbabbitt8876
    @normanbabbitt8876 3 года назад +9

    I agree with all this even form a raised bed perspective. I tried straw, alfalfa, pine straw with some leaves, and just straight leaves, the pine straw with leaves offered the best immediate water retention, but the straight leaves did the best for soil quality.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +2

      The results for me have just been awesome. Everything is compressing nicely as of now.

    • @michaelkraft6018
      @michaelkraft6018 Год назад

      I put a good amount of leaves on my raised beds, probably 5-6 inches in the fall. Can I plant straight into them or is that too much and some or all should be removed?

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  Год назад

      @michael kraft I show what I do in the update videos. I peel back leaves, plant, then replace leaves, but leave a 2-3" gap to stem.

  • @kicknadeadcat
    @kicknadeadcat 2 года назад +2

    I only have a 20 x 20 ft garden and I have been growing vegetables for the past 30 plus years. Using the typical npk fertilizer. Last year I started read and watching videos on Korean natural farming. I decided it was worth a try. This is the method I used. In the fall instead of having leaves hauled away I purchased a Worx leaf shredder. It has an 11 to 1 ratio turns 11 bags of leaves into one. Instead of rototilling I just used a pitch fork to aerate the soil. I got a load of free wood chips. I measured out my beds with 2 ft walkways. I piled on about 6 to 10 ins of leaves in my beds and the wood chips in the walk ways. I make a microbial liquid in 5 gal buckets and drenched the leaves. Then covered it with a heavy duty landscape material and let it sit all winter. In the early spring I added a now broken down compost of leaves garden waste and food waste to the. Beds. I also have two large tumblers which were filled with the blackest soil I’ve ever seen. Did another soil drench covered again until planting which was about 4 to 6 weeks off. Best garden I’ve ever had. No insect problems, 99% weed free and I didn’t need to purchase fertilizer. Every 2 to 3 weeks I added more microbes. I made fertilizer from comfrey leaves, I have a dozen plants. Comfrey is amazing, I put a small piece of root in the ground and was harvesting in 3 months. I’ve harvested 4 times this year, it just keeps coming and the leaves are huge. Stinks to high heaven but leave it open a few days and the smell dissipates. This year I added one more process to my garden, Bokashi. Fermenting all my food waste in a5 gal Bokashi bucket in my house. It ferments everything, bread, pasta, meat, fish. That will be put in my compost pile and tumblers. This year was the first time I tried growing Fig trees from cuttings. I made my own soil and used the Korean farming method on them. 25 cuttings, 23 tree grew. I put 8 in the ground and 4 in pots the rest I gave to my family and sold. I grew 12 varieties and they tend to grow at different rates. By the end of the season the smallest was 3 ft the tallest 7 ft and that one in a pot. On top of all that I got to eat figs from growing a stick in the first year. I am totally sold on Korean Natural Farming. Feed the soil not the plant.

  • @leelindsay5618
    @leelindsay5618 3 года назад +7

    Next up, add fall and winter crops to keep a living root in the soil year round. Move pepper plants into pots for the winter because they are perenial in warmer climates.

  • @Peachy08
    @Peachy08 Год назад

    I have chickens and in my chicken run I have built a compost area in one corner. Every fall we mulch up the leaves and dump them in the compost area in the run. The chickens poop in it and work it till it turns into beautiful soil. I take it out and throw it into a holding place and repeat. We do this with grass clippings as well. In January I start adding it to the garden beds and turn it in. Makes beautiful soil!

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  Год назад

      Sounds like you've got a great system going there Ni Ni.

  • @bestseedorchard1107
    @bestseedorchard1107 3 года назад +13

    As longs as you are positive that the leaves come from a disease free tree leaf mulch is great. But if those trees have any disease the spores can be in the leaves and composting will not kill all the spores, some spores remain viable for 10-20 years waiting for a plant to be present to infect. The disease then spreads to the plant , goes up to the leaves and the cycle starts again. So inspect the trees carefully during the summer and be sure they are healthy before collecting leaves.

    • @lisakukla459
      @lisakukla459 3 года назад +7

      If there's any concern, just hot compost them first. As little as 1 cubic yard is enough mass to achieve proper temperature, and diluted urine provides enough nitrogen and moisture to get the process going, for example, but "compost starter" can also be purchased. If the pile holds a temp of 120°-140° for a week or more, which is pretty easy to manage, pathogens and weed seeds will be eliminated and it can safely be spread over the garden at that point. The compost basically pasteurizes itself, with very minimal effort on your part. There's really no need to wait for it to be fully decomposed before it's applied to the garden.

    • @danarzechula3769
      @danarzechula3769 3 года назад

      @@lisakukla459 what is the ratio of urine to water

  • @ahnaahna7278
    @ahnaahna7278 Год назад

    We laid flattened cardboard boxes down onto our flower beds and piled mulch on 2 years ago. Barely a weed. We started a new bed with cardboard and we mowed the millions of leaves and put that on the new area along with some store bought mulch. We were able to use both the leaves and mulch by staggering out...our purchases of the mulch in the new bed. Your video is helpful....to remind us to utilize the shredded leaves more and more.
    Thanks, Ahna

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  Год назад

      You are very welcome Ahna - leaves are the best!

  • @terraspath2642
    @terraspath2642 3 года назад +20

    Started doing this, this fall. My neighbor pitched in his leaves for me too! Looking forward to seeing the difference this spring!

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +6

      It may take the full year for the difference to be realized. But hopefully your experience mirrors mine - less weeding, bigger veggie yields, and nicer soil (by the Fall). Good luck!

    • @shoyrushoyru
      @shoyrushoyru Год назад

      how did it go?

  • @emkn1479
    @emkn1479 Год назад +1

    100% agree. Adding leaves to my ornamental beds changed the soil for the better and keeps down weeds amazingly well.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  Год назад

      I couldn't agree more. It is the best soil improvement I've ever seen.

  • @jbg944
    @jbg944 3 года назад +9

    I started this up last year in my shade garden. It really helped with the weeds.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +1

      Yeah - I figured it would be an improvement. But it really was a huge reduction in weeds.

  • @lorrainemosby1645
    @lorrainemosby1645 2 года назад

    You, young man (and wife) have a 85+18 days more=86 year old convert...I plan to start collecting my Oak tree leaves soon,and very soon. I will write my comment to you, when I have my leaf garden all fenced in, ready for next year....I am so excited.........God bless you, yo wife, and yo garden!!!!!!!

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  2 года назад

      Thank you Lorraine! You are going to love the reduction in weeding to your garden! Best of luck to you and your garden!

  • @maylemom
    @maylemom 3 года назад +6

    I appreciate that you show comparisons as time evolves from one year to the next. Most vlogs show putting something together and never show results. I gathered 72 bags of leaves this year. I'm trying many different things. Composting in the bag, tumbling, some in the garden, and then some emptied in the chicken run. They are all experiments to see what happens. The one problem I have here is wind. One day I dumped leaves for the chickens to scratch through. The next morning after a windy night, no leaves. (I use the same 2x4 welded wire fence.) That wasn't helpful. In one garden bed where I put leaves, I covered with garden cloth and put rocks on it to keep it from blowing away. It will be interesting to see what it looks like when I uncover in the spring.
    One question. In many, many youtube videos, the vlogger states, "The worms will come." If the yard starts out as all clay and there are not worms, where do they come from?
    Thanks for sharing your trade "secrets" to help us newbies!

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +4

      Hi - that is a bummer about the wind. It almost sounds you live in NW Iowa or Tornado alley. Perhaps hosing the leaves down would help?
      But to answer your question, in general the worms are there. They are just deeper then you've seen. Most worms are actually an invasive species in North America. But, when you provide a food source and habitat that they like, they tend to find their way there. I didn't see many or any worms when I first removed my grass for my veggie garden. But, they dutifully showed up without an invitation. It's kind of like saying, 'nature finds a way'.
      I thought I had clay soil, and while I don't have 'clay'....I have overly compacted silt with virtually no hint of worms in the turf-grass areas. So, you might be surprised. It's kind of like the old line, 'if you build it, they will come'. Give them a reason, and you may be surprised.
      And thank you for the kind words - it means a lot!

    • @tilinfoster
      @tilinfoster 3 года назад +1

      We live on the Lake Wales Ridge in Central Florida and it gets windy here too. Using leaves as mulch for our beds with no fencing between neighbors can be challenging so we hose the leaves down with water when we first lay them and with each layer and then add sticks or whatever is available. They sort of bind together after a month of daily watering or so and we don't have to worry about them obtaining lift off.

  • @ebradley2306
    @ebradley2306 6 месяцев назад

    I cover my flower beds with primarily oak leaves. The soil is chock full of worms. Use leaf mold on top of my veg garden twice a year (garden all year). They are full of worms too. Working towards not buying any amendments except peat moss for seed starting mix and some fish emulsion. Compost kitchen/garden waste and have a worm bin. Chip small branches. Everything I need, for the most part, is in my yard. 🙂

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  6 месяцев назад +1

      Sounds like you've got a wonderful system going! And I'm like you - no need to spend $$ on fertilizers

  • @knuckledraggingneanderthal720
    @knuckledraggingneanderthal720 3 года назад +13

    Black raspberries do well under black walnut tree's, if you have walnut leaves mulch your black raspberries with them.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +3

      Excellent tip. And a delicious berry. Can't wait until mine start producing.

    • @carmenortiz5294
      @carmenortiz5294 3 года назад

      Black raspberries are great, unless they are spreading everywhere (like mine are, thanks birds). Last year, I decided to replant the ones I pull out, next to my fence that circles most of my yard to keep people out, those thorns are deadly. They do too well everywhere.

    • @carmenortiz5294
      @carmenortiz5294 3 года назад +1

      @@growitbuildit Careful what you wish for, good luck. lol I have canned black raspberries to last me a few years, can't give enough away.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад

      Before I had little kids I used to go to a massive patch in the mountains each summer to forage. I would fill up a small lunch cooler and freeze most. But they are awesome.

    • @Casiusss3
      @Casiusss3 3 года назад +1

      Walnut leaves have some juglon however not so much to make huge damage. Skin around the nut have huge amounts of it so do not throw nut skin from walnut this will have huge impact on the surrounding soil

  • @gabec2494
    @gabec2494 2 года назад

    I just mowed all my leaves and underbrush with my push mower. I fluff it up and mow over again until it's like confetti consistency. I got 6- 55 gallon worth to apply to my garden pathways. Fortunately, I have a sloping front yard in which I dropped a dead tree to trap any yard run off. So far this winter, I've relocated roughly 5 cubic yards of pure black leaf compost that's been added into my 2 big veg gardens. I've turned red clay to near pure black soil in 3 years at a depth of 12 inches. Just use what you have near you and do it every day if possible. Free workout yields a free healthy garden.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  2 года назад +1

      Outstanding Gabe! That is the kind of results I like to here, and I couldn't agree more with your comment. Free workout yields a free healthy garden.

  • @karlijnlike4lane
    @karlijnlike4lane Год назад +3

    I've seen a few of your blogs randomly & enjoyed them, and with this one I just want to tell you how much I appreciate the simplicity & clarity of your illustration and the normal plain conversational tone even though you're really doing science. 😉 Refreshing. I'm just a yard gardener like who loves working hard and making things better, as much DIY(M) as possible. I tried leaf mulch last fall on a previously neglected bed - having decided that what I wanted to do is just plant for pollinators, and get some vines and bloomy perennials well started in spring, but not use ferts. For some reason, I was afraid to put too much leaf on, not really realizing that in addition to improving the soil, I could be hot composting & pre-killing weed seeds. The leaf mulch definitely improved the soil quality, along with the spring addition of my own organic compost cooked all winter. The results with the perennials I started were encouraging enough to vouch for this method with all its benefits & I will definitely be adding more this fall. Unfortunately we lost our 3 largest maples recently to storm damage, but there are plenty more around. Thanks for your great content. 👍

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  Год назад

      Thank you so much Kim! Leaves are really about as close to a 'magic wand' you can get for improving soil. It is difficult to generate enough compost to cover an entire bed with a thick enough layer to enrich but also suppress weeds. Yet the leaf mulch has no issue. Good luck this Fall finding more leaves.

  • @dannyhughes4889
    @dannyhughes4889 3 года назад +1

    No nonsense, no Electronic noise [background 'Music'] well explained and informative.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад

      Thank you Danny. You are very welcome!

  • @flash_flood_area
    @flash_flood_area 3 года назад +4

    Feeling validated... I started collecting neighborhood leaves this fall, and dumping them in my desert backyard. I imagined my kids would think I was nuts, but they approve. And now I can also show them this.
    Looking forward to the results, and already planning to get more leaves next year.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +2

      That's awesome. You will love the results

    • @sunshine5349
      @sunshine5349 3 года назад +1

      I used to poop in buckets and pee in milk jugs to add to my garden. you are pretty normal. lol.

    • @AhrayahLaban
      @AhrayahLaban Год назад

      @@sunshine5349 How were the results from using humanure?

  • @TSD0416
    @TSD0416 2 года назад +2

    Excellent video.👍👍👍 Should be filed under Gardening 101, and RUclips should recommend this to anyone who loves to garden and wants to improve their garden soil. I live in Toronto (Canada) and am surrounded by beautiful Maple Trees and every fall you can see 8 - 10 large bags of leaves in front of every house in our neighborhood. Not once, did I think I could use leaf mulch to improve my soil. Instead I would pay $4 per bag for black Mulch at Lowe's and haul them to my backyard one bag at a time. What a waste of time and money. Thank you for sharing this information. I'm going to send this video to my dad who puts out 15 bags of leaves every Fall season.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  2 года назад +2

      Thank you! I planted my tomatoes today, and in general I needed to go down 6" or more until I hit 'orange' soil. And it is incredibly easy to dig. I used to have to stand on a spade as it was so compacted. Now a hand trowel goes right in.

  • @mariapaglialungo293
    @mariapaglialungo293 3 года назад +5

    I had begun doing this and now I will continue thank u

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад

      Excellent Maria. It has given me great results. Good luck!

  • @cooki47
    @cooki47 Год назад

    I’ve been collecting leaves now in town for three years. I lucked out last Sunday when I went in and found two families raking up piles of leaves. They happily filled all my bags for me😀

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  Год назад

      Nice find! I'm going to be doing a bit of cruising for leaves today too

  • @bierbrauer11
    @bierbrauer11 3 года назад +4

    Re: black walnut - compost the leaves separately for 6mo. and you should be good to go.

  • @lorrainemosby1645
    @lorrainemosby1645 2 года назад

    I have started to collect my leaves, I collected four bags yesterday AM from a nearby street curb..(one block,from one street to the next street) good exersizeing) This AM I went back and saw a man collecting the leaves from some company. I stopped my car and asked if he would mind if he could put the leaves (Oak tree leaves) in my large black bags. He said leave my bags and come back in an hour, I did and there they were my bags of leaves all tied up waiting for me!!!! "God will Provide"!! So...I am on my way thanks to you and your dear wife. I will keep you posted on my progress.........Oh yes....he said he picks up the fallen leaves every Wednesday morning.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  2 года назад

      Nice! That is awesome Lorraine. That is a blessing.

  • @CoreyDodge
    @CoreyDodge 3 года назад +15

    Thank you so much for this, and thank you for documenting literally 2 years of doing so. This answers so many questions for me.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +5

      Thank you Corey - I'm glad you found this info helpful. It is the best thing I've ever done for my garden. I still haven't had to weed my garden this year except for maybe a couple random plants.

  • @jakobbrun6535
    @jakobbrun6535 3 года назад +2

    I went down to the local football field which has a row of trees next to it, and collected several bags of leaves. I regret not getting more and more :) mimic a forest in your garden, and that's off to a good start.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад

      Excellent! Sounds like you are on your way. Next year you can just drive around suburbs and get them bagged for you!

    • @jakobbrun6535
      @jakobbrun6535 3 года назад +1

      @@growitbuildit would if I had a drivers license ;)

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад

      Fair enough!

  • @LoanNguyen-sb6pj
    @LoanNguyen-sb6pj 3 года назад +5

    Thank you for sharing this,because my husband never think the leaves it good for the garden but l do

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад

      You are welcome Loan. My results were excellent.

  • @diverdave4056
    @diverdave4056 Год назад +1

    my soil is rock hard clay ... for the last 10 years I have covered the garden with 12 inches of mulched leaves . In the spring time i rototill everything up before planting . My garden soil is now plush jet black soil !

  • @stevecooper8121
    @stevecooper8121 Год назад +3

    Been doing this for two years and it really makes a huge difference on the garden.
    I have 3 big maples and a popular tree, run the mulching blade over the yard then my sweeper and dump and spread out to about 8 inches deep.Add all my coffee grounds and filters, the amount of earth worms are amazing.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  Год назад +1

      My experience matches yours Steve - leaves & organic matter are amazing for improving soil

  • @Brockthedog315
    @Brockthedog315 2 года назад

    I get leaves from many of my neighbors every year. Mulch them with my mower right in the street. Then spread them heavy over my perennial and shrub beds for the winter. This mulch will stick around until mid summer when the plant foliage shades the ground. Just let the worms do the work for you. My soil is dark black and easy to dig even right after rains. The birds are provided some great food picking at the worms. Nothing better than leaves and they are 100% free. Just a bit of labor. Thanks for sharing this video.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  2 года назад

      I couldn't agree more with everything you said!

    • @brendagamba7826
      @brendagamba7826 2 года назад

      @@growitbuildit can I do this in a brown cardboard 📦 box? Using,,kitchent scraps , green leaves.?. . Thanks from Cape Town, South Africa

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  2 года назад

      @Brenda Gamba - You mean make a compost pile? The box will probably shred itself pretty quick from the moisture.

  • @frankscales7295
    @frankscales7295 3 года назад +3

    Im in my mid 70s and i half collected leaves for many years, a good video my friend. two best things you can do to break down leaves are coffee grounds and urine. Drink a couple of pints of water which is very good for you anyway and your leaves will thank you for the big Boost of nitrogen. Keep up the good work.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад

      Thank you! And you're right. Those are excellent tips.

    • @jackwezesa1081
      @jackwezesa1081 2 года назад +1

      I wouldn’t suggest urine .

  • @GrandNational66
    @GrandNational66 3 года назад

    I also knew a worm farmer who collected leaf bags of leaves for his worms to eat...not sure what his recipe was but it produced wonderful castings he would bag & sell as potting soil.

  • @mark109s
    @mark109s 3 года назад +4

    Great video, I do this every year here where I live in the suburbs. Been doing this for five years now and my garden keeps getting better. This definitely Works!

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +1

      Thank you Mark! Glad you are getting great results too.

  • @fewetoo
    @fewetoo 2 года назад

    Been doing it for years here in Tulsa... Try buying 3-4 25 lb. bags of the cheapest compost you can find and spread it out (thinly) on top of your piled leaves prior to the first snow. The biome in the compost will populate your leaf pile from top to bottom and accelerate the decomposition process. By the time that you get ready to plant in the spring you will have nothing but beautiful black dirt. I re-mulch with saved shredded after planting and have had great results.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  2 года назад

      I may try that this year, as I've got a compost pile that is just about ready.

  • @youngbuck5009
    @youngbuck5009 3 года назад +5

    Awesome video. My family friend has for years done the same as you but tilled the remaining layer into the soil in the spring with no adverse effects. Their sunlight situation isn’t ideal but the rich soil gives them success with just about everything they grow. I’m trying this but plan on covering the leaf layer with a layer of compost in early spring to finish the job.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +4

      Thank you xSolo - if your friend has success, then I wouldn't change anything. When it comes to gardening, I don't argue with results.
      Layering the leaves with compost will probably have you set up for some good yields this coming year. Good luck!

    • @caseG80
      @caseG80 3 года назад +3

      Tilling isnt a good idea for few reasons one being it disturbs the worms possibly even kills some and there eggs, also disturbs the microbes, mycorrhiza or fungal hyphy. All the life that’s been happily doing its thing is disturbed and exposed to sun light. It’s also a step that takes time thst could be used doing something else. A freshly tilled area looks appealing to the eye and easy to work in but results would most likely be all the better without tilling. Cheers

    • @yinghongtan
      @yinghongtan 2 года назад +1

      @@caseG80 That explains the population of earth works in my garden disappears after tilling. Never thought of that. Thanks.

    • @MikeB-jn2bu
      @MikeB-jn2bu Год назад

      @@caseG80 I thought the same about tilling with leaves but only doing it for the first year. I figured it would disturb the microbes and worms but only in the first season.

  • @peterbrucker798
    @peterbrucker798 2 года назад

    I use to burn to dispose all my organic debris. For the last 3 years I've been using all debris as a direct mulch for my garden beds. It has turned my hard pack clay into dark organic rich soil. I live in 30141. Lot of pines. But in fall this allows me to top dress the beds for appearance. I haven't bought mulch or soil amendments for 3 years. Great video.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  2 года назад +1

      Thank you Peter! I'm with you - no supplemental fertilizers or amendments. Massive soil improvements.

  • @gailthornbury291
    @gailthornbury291 3 года назад +14

    I too use all the leaves I can get my hands on. Just an observation about your turning the leaves. I think this is appropriate during a hot composting phase but after that decomposition is mostly fungal and by turning at that stage you might be actually harming the mycelium and slowing decomposition. Maybe after the initial heating it would actually be better not to disturb the leaves. Less work too.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +2

      I think you are exactly right Gail. I agree.

    • @wespetit150
      @wespetit150 2 года назад

      This is the start of the leaves-street-war 4 al them watched tis thumbnail hahahaha. No ofence

    • @curiousbystander9193
      @curiousbystander9193 10 месяцев назад +1

      thanks for the accurate input....while his direct application to the garden seems easy, the best way would be to get ahead of the game one year.. where you shred your fall leaves, let them hot compost, turn them once then let them migrate into a 6 months cold, fungal compost, then add to the garden...... this direct application of leaves may be limiting the N available each spring..

  • @seamus6994
    @seamus6994 Год назад

    Great video. I have leaf trees and 6 huge Juniper trees, which I hate. Juniper trees are messy as heck. They have a massive amount of pollen, and not much grows under them naturally. A large side of my yard is where the Junipers grow. I had one removed, it cost a fortune. So I'm keeping the other six. Anyway, over 50 years of rotted Juniper has laid under them decomposing. I use wheel barrow after wheel barrow of the stuff for my garden every year. Looks like black dirt with a massive amount of worms. I also have clay soil. But it's looking good from leaves and the juniper now. A couple years ago I decided to create a shade garden for once. The transformation is awesome. I'm amazed how many of my neighbors throw leaves away. And leaves more than anything, keep dormant plant roots from freezing. I always used straw when I lived on the farm. Now I know leaves are much better at keeping the ground warmer in Winter.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  Год назад

      That is awesome that you get all that material from the Junipers. At least you are getting something from them.

  • @lar113
    @lar113 3 года назад +4

    In 2021, there will be a lot fewer leaf bags for the yard waste disposal company to pick up from my house. Not sure I can use all the leaves, but I will try. Between this and creating leaf mold and compost, I will be off to a good start Thank you for the video.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +3

      Excellent Lar. I am basically using about 2X the leaves this year. I expect that they will all break down just the same. We've always had decent yields by just amending with compost in the holes where we planted. But this year it was a big difference. Our plants were much larger than ever before, and we had a ton of veggies. Good luck!

  • @SupBarackheretoday
    @SupBarackheretoday Год назад

    My grandpa was reared during forced segregation African American backed then colored
    ..he taught me how to farm...this was a trick he showed me...we use to clear lots fir of course little $ 🎉or barter system. I learnt so much from the share cropper (my grandpa and my great grandpa..my great great grandpa left the kids notes on how to farm ...family secrets....my brother has a business in farming from these tips. I'm grateful for my family passing down there hard times to us well grounded in the ground.

  • @198331c
    @198331c 3 года назад +4

    Perfect! I have been carting my leaves to the curb. I now have a 20 x 20 ft garden and a compost pile. Figured I'd use some leaves this fall for brown layers and now the rest I will mulch up and put in the garden. Great information. Thanks

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +1

      You are very welcome! You will not regret it.

  • @wespetit150
    @wespetit150 2 года назад

    Hi, im totaly new in gardening, im 44yrs old, and i hav my verry first garden now, so im a rooky who wants to experiment en look how it feels to be a farmer😜🤪, the more time i spend in my garden, the more im starting to get in love with nature. looks verry Educational, tis is one il do this yr. Peace bro. Il ceeps u head up.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  2 года назад

      Thank you - you are going to love gardening Wes - good luck!

  • @iannowicki4440
    @iannowicki4440 3 года назад +3

    Great video. I was thinking about doing this last fall and certainly regret not doing it. I’ll certainly do it this fall.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад

      Hi Ian - it's the best thing I've ever done for my garden. You will love the results.

  • @crossingtheline4372
    @crossingtheline4372 Год назад

    I just mulched leaves today with the lawnmower. Looks like I'm on the right path. Thanks for the video.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  Год назад

      You are on the right path - good luck! I bet you will have the same success I have had.

  • @patricianealfarley7150
    @patricianealfarley7150 2 года назад +3

    Thank you so much for the comprehensive examples you shared. Much appreciated. It’s Nov 21, the maple leaves have recently fallen & im making a new deep bed. Love the before & after results. Very helpful.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  2 года назад +2

      Excellent Patricia - thank you for the kind words. I'm happy to help you out, and good luck!

  • @Mopardude
    @Mopardude 2 года назад +1

    I been composting my leaves for a couples of years now, I have a semi wooded lot so I have basically an infinite supply of material. When you have just leaves piled up by themselves flipping them over doesn't seem to help them break down any faster or at least from my experience they don't. The bottom of the pile always breaks down the quickest if you leave it. I have the space to make new pile every year, and I just let that pile break down a year or 2 before I use it. If you start mixing grass and other vegetable compost in with it, than I find its beneficial to flip the pile every once in awhile. Good vid!

    • @josephcernansky1794
      @josephcernansky1794 2 года назад

      use you lawn mower!!! I lay the piles about 6" to 8" deep on a side street or in my shade garden after I mow off the ferns and hostas....shred them into quarter size ...leaf litter, rake that litter up and use the bagger to collect the last of it.......pile that with some nitrogen fertilizer, spread some composted manure for starter fuel and water it all in....within a year a 3' tall pile is down to about 6"...and flipping the pile every couple months is helpful to speed things up
      I recently picked up some large 42" diameter HDPE storm water pipe from a construction site being thrown in the dumpster. They let me have the couple cut-off pieces about 30" long each. MAKEs the PERFECT compost bins!!! For FREE!!!

    • @Mopardude
      @Mopardude 2 года назад

      @@josephcernansky1794 Yea your adding other materials so flipping it makes sense. You also have to understand I am in the north so pretty much for 6 months after I make my leaf piles they are either going to get buried with snow or frozen solid or both. So my decomp really doesn't start till spring.

    • @josephcernansky1794
      @josephcernansky1794 2 года назад

      @@Mopardude You can still "cook" compost in the winter.......I learned that by accident many years ago.....I was at big box home store that left all their plants out overnight of a hard freeze..so I arrive at night and a young guy was sitting out back smoking a cig and lamenting he had to do all this work to empty cart loads of potted plants in the dumpster, and it was cold out. So, I offered to help him. He just had to bring the carts of plants out back and I'd load them in my truck and dump them in my compost pile. Needless to say after I emptied all the pots of the dying flowers and plants I had enough potting soil to fill over 2 pick up loads. I also would drive past a horse stable on my way home from work and fill several buckets everyday of the composted horse manure. Dumped all that in the pile of plants and potting soil along with watering it all with left over Miracle Grow. That winter, with over a foot of snow on the ground and temps around ZERO at night I didn't have much snow on my compost pile. I went out to check that out one afternoon and opened the pile up and stuck my hand in there. I almost got burnt!!! The steam was coming off and it was hot!!! By next spring the pile was significantly reduced and ready to cultivate into my garden. THAT started my journey into composting!!!

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  2 года назад

      I've gotten piles hot enough to melt the snow. You feel a great sense of pride when you manage to do it!

  • @mikeross4
    @mikeross4 3 года назад +3

    Good morning from England. This is an excellent video and I wish I had known about the benefits of using leaves in this way plus a whole lot of other things connected with no dig (till) gardening, years ago. I will definitely collecting lots of bags of leaves this autumn and spreading it over my vegetable garden. I look forward to looking at your other videos and how your garden will grow this coming season.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +1

      Thank you Mike! I had a very strong suspicion that it would have a nice effect on my soil, so I went 'big'. And the results still surprised me - by July I was noticing way fewer weeds ever (except year 1). And our plants were just huge all summer.
      Just make sure you shred them up - as based on other comments I've heard that slugs can be quite a challenge in the rainier areas. As I think shredded will provide less cover for the slugs.

    • @josephcernansky1794
      @josephcernansky1794 2 года назад

      You can wait for the leaves to turn back into the humus of the forest floor or help the process by shredding them with a lawn mower or try one of those stand up leaf shredding machines specifically dedicated to shredding them. BUT remember....brown is carbon...green is nitrogen...you need both for good composting...or you'll just have a leaf mat for years! I'm too impatient for that...It takes decades for the forest to break down leaves and twigs into that rich black glorious fragrant hummus.

  • @tex24
    @tex24 2 года назад +1

    I've been doing this for a few years now with great success. The only issue I have is that running your lawn mower over the leaves to mulch the leaves tends to clog up the air filter on the lawn mower because of the amount of dust mulching dry leaves creates. Something to be aware of.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  2 года назад +1

      That's a good tip Tex. I haven't had that happen to my model. But I have gotten it extra hot if I was too aggressive with the leaves.

  • @rubytuby6369
    @rubytuby6369 3 года назад +6

    I put 2ft of leaves on my garden every year for the past 3 years. The soil is great,full of worms and bugs.

    • @momdoan
      @momdoan 3 года назад +1

      eew bugs? {teasing}

    • @lostinfens
      @lostinfens 3 года назад +1

      Do you put them on whole or shredded?

    • @rubytuby6369
      @rubytuby6369 3 года назад

      @@lostinfens Mostly whole leaves some people cut them with their mowers and throw them in the bags., I go around town in the fall and just pick up 10 bags at a time from peoples yards who have already raked them up and put them in the bags for me they’re all free.

  • @marvinrobinson8519
    @marvinrobinson8519 Год назад +1

    Nice presentation! I have used leaves for many hears with great success! At one point, I stopped using leaves and my garden gradually got poorer and poorer, smaller less healthy plants with diminished yields. So now I'm back to adding leaves. I layer them on the garden in the fall (suppresses weeds) then in the spring I work them into the soil. Now! Corn 10' tall with huge ears, 1 1/2 pound onions, tomatoes up to 2 pounds and more! Love it! soil texture is better every year. Tilling does an amazing job with slug control, too.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  Год назад

      Nice Marvin - good to hear you are having lots of success too.

  • @shirlenehigbie5677
    @shirlenehigbie5677 3 года назад +3

    On my landscape I only use leaf mulch ... been doing that for the past 10 or so years ... Mostly flowers and shrubs ... however I do have three tomato plants that grow really tall with nice tomatoes so many that I have to share them with my neighbor .... Unfortunately I have to buy my mulch ---- Bummer ... !!!

  • @marielindsay4720
    @marielindsay4720 10 месяцев назад

    Validates all the blowing of leaves from the lawn to my backyard woods for years. Also pile up clippings and dead plants. This year I have ground tree stumps to add. I’ll start using material from theses piles on my garden plants.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  10 месяцев назад

      I'm glad I could help you out Marie! And keep doing it, and the ground up stumps will help too!

  • @jasonsmith8167
    @jasonsmith8167 3 года назад +3

    Great video. And thanks for talking about black walnut leaves didn't know that.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад

      Thank you! Apparently Walnut trees are particularly harsh on tomato plants. But, like just about everything that is chemically organic, the poison will break down from microorganisms. It just takes a while. But I've known plenty of people who won't even compost the leaves or sawdust.

  • @tintunbirha
    @tintunbirha 2 года назад

    Thank God I came across this video. I have plenty of leaves and getting rid of them is a problem. Now I know what to do with them.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  2 года назад

      And to think you've been throwing away the key to good soil for years!

  • @Thehomeandgardenguru
    @Thehomeandgardenguru 3 года назад +6

    New sub. Thank you for this video. I've been working on improving my clay soil for a while now. By adding amendments, worm casting, and now leaving the leaves in my garden beds. It doesn't look the greatest right now, but I'm hoping it will help!

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +2

      This helps a ton! Organic matter is the key for breaking everything up and improving drainage. I've found that I don't always have clay - more often it is over-compacted sandy loam that behaves like clay. Good luck Linda!

    • @Thehomeandgardenguru
      @Thehomeandgardenguru 3 года назад +1

      @@growitbuildit thanks, my goal nice fluffy soil, it’s getting there!

  • @Pp7450-n5u
    @Pp7450-n5u Год назад

    I fill a 55 gal trash barrel about 1/4 full and mulch them with my weed eater. Works beautifully. Wear a mask and eye protection!
    On a side note, The fresh fallen leaves are extra dry this year. I put some in a trash bag and crumple it up several times and could not believe how broke down they got. I'm sure it has to do with the lack of rain we had over the summer (southern Iowa). Scary stuff when you think about it..

  • @FleetwoodPatch
    @FleetwoodPatch 3 года назад +4

    This is a great video! I piled a huge layer of leaves in my raised beds in October. Very excited to see the results this summer.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад

      I bet you are going to get great results - good luck!

  • @michaelg4931
    @michaelg4931 7 месяцев назад

    In the fall, I use a bagger push-mower and then dump the bagger full of leaves through a SunJoe leaf shredder that is over a 32 gallon garbage can. They end up almost like a powder. When that fills, I dump it in a pile. The next spring/summer/fall, I mow & bag my lawn and start a new pile mixing the grass cuttings with the shredded leaves in the new pile. Unless you add a bunch of greens/nitrogen, it takes forever for just leaves to break down. I also add veg/fruit scraps from the kitchen to that compost pile along with horse manure/sawdust from a horse stable near me that gives it away for free.
    The following spring, I add the now composted goodness to my garden areas. I also use cover crops and that helped as much or more than the added compost/organics to condition the soil. I plant a fall cover crop, primarily a mix of daikon radish, Austrian winter peas and buckwheat, let it grow (I do take a few of the radish greens/roots and pea sprouts/pods) and then let it winter kill. In areas that won't be planted in cool season crops, I sew a spring cover crop of the same as soon as the compost is loose enough to move/spread. I sew the seed, then cover it with a thin layer of compost. A week or two before I plant the 'real' veggies, I cut down the cover crop (usually by mowing it with a push-mower set up for mulching), wait a few days and then turn it all under, sometimes with a shovel other times with a walk behind rear-tine tiller.
    I have 90+% heavy clay soil FWIW, so I have to really work to get the soil in shape to grow decently. After 4 years, I now have ~4600 square feet of garden area with a foot plus of really good black soil.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  7 месяцев назад +1

      Sounds like you've really got a good system going. And your hard work has paid off! Nice!

  • @kariblom1223
    @kariblom1223 3 года назад +4

    Wow, this is a great video with explanation to keep things simple. I really appreciate the easy breakdown of this topic and all of the visual comparisons. I have lots of leaves and used them to cover the beds before the snow. I wasn't sure what I'd do with them in the spring and now I know. I was so worried they'd turn anaerobic. Much thanks. I appreciate your addressing the jumping worms. I don't have them here, yet, and am trying to be proactive so they don't arrive via fish bait dumps to the garden or compost worm order.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +1

      Thank you Kari! I'm glad you found it helpful. It makes the effort worth it to get nice comments like this and help people. Best of luck.
      The jumping worms were here before we bought the house, and who really knows for how long. But there are lots of them. You just need to learn to live with them, as there is no control method outside of killing everything. I have read that they can expand over 10 acres per year, which is crazy.

  • @michaelfranke8945
    @michaelfranke8945 2 года назад +1

    Good day, and thank you for this video, this demonstration. It reinforces my own experience with mulching and composting. I grew up in Klerksdorp in South Africa, where my parents had a bricked in 2m lwide by 3m long by1/2m high compost heap at least all my life, and everything organic except weeds and bones was dumped there. Myself, I don't exclude the weeds and bones any more, everything goes. When harvesting the compost, usually when it heaped about one and a half to two metres high, the big partially digested pieces got recycled in with the new material to act as a kind of inoculation for the future process, and anyway break down further. One very significant observation I made recently is how many roots from the surrounding trees (including those from two of our neighbours!) and our hedge grow up into the heap from below, both for the nutrients and very likely for the long term moisture held there as we are in a relatively low rainfall area, and that rainfall usually occurring in the early part of our summer.
    This, and me noticing how healthy my late father-in-law's hedge was, that received as a mulch all the grass cuttings from his large lawn, has prompted me to abandon my parents' brick central compost heap, everything now composts under the hedge and the fruit trees, where it contributes to an excellent water retaining, feeding and weed- and ant- controlling mulch. The first year of composting under the apricot and pecan nut trees saw them increase in height by about two metres again I surmise due to the retained moisture in the surrounding soil.
    My final point, that I noticed when I lived seven years in Gaborone, capital city of Botswana, which has about half the annual rainfall of us here, is that garden waste that is constantly walked upon composts surprisingly fast and thoroughly! The house that I lived in had a overflow rainwater drainage canal between us and our neighbours. These people and those behind them, instead of paying for its removal, were dumping their garden waste over the common back corners of their gardens. The drainage canal had an illegal path along it and it was onto this path that the waste was dumped, and the pedestrians walked over it daily, breaking it up, compressing it and aerating as it sprang back. The compost thus formed was excellent! Now, for the last three years, of the garden waste I collect from up and down our street, I put half on the paths in our garden, and the other half under the hedge, grapes and fruit and nut trees. (Again, note it includes everything, leaves, grass cuttings, twigs and the more than occasional branches, and of course lots of soil and dust.) The moisture in our soil, especially under the plants is retained for more than four months, obviously reducing the need for watering AND the paths where we walk consistently produce rich, aerated, decomposed ready for use mulch/compost in three months! Again, any large undigested pieces just go back in for further processing, and they and the soil underneath re-inoculate the new matter we spread on top.
    Thank you for allowing comments, I wish you and all gardeners all success and pleasure. Keep well. Michael Franke

    • @michaelfranke8945
      @michaelfranke8945 2 года назад

      Forgot to mention, I can attest to the ease of controlling weeds too. By manual removal, because there are just so few of them!

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  2 года назад

      Hi Michael - I too have found that if garden waste is trampled it breaks down much faster. I suspect it has to do with more surface area of the material being available via the 'trampling'. Thank you for sharing.

    • @michaelfranke8945
      @michaelfranke8945 2 года назад +1

      Yes of course, the breaking up of the large pieces is the key. Thank you; wishing you happy, creative and productive gardening!@@growitbuildit

  • @denathompson6527
    @denathompson6527 3 года назад +6

    So glad to see this video. I did actually what you did last year without knowing if it would help or not. Saw a slight difference this spring. My garden soil is very dark in color but compacts just like your clay soil. I will continue to use the leaves and hope for even better soil next year. Thanks

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +1

      You're welcome Dena. I had always put some leaves on my garden, but never more than an inch or two. And it would be far from uniform. 2019/2020 was the first year I really piled it on, and the results were excellent. Hope you see as much improvement as I have have - good luck!

  • @BigAlSparks
    @BigAlSparks 3 года назад

    This is great example of what people in your areas should be doing if they want to truly help the planet. However there's 1 problem with this process, that might be eliminated, depending on your situation, and resources. Each year that's 30 to 60 trashbags that enter the landfill. If your situation permits it. Try using some heavy canvas tarps. Blow leaves onto tarp, drag tarp into a utility trailer, pull another tarp over top, secure it, and in some cases you might be able to back right up to where you want to dump the leaves to blow them out or easily drag the tarps over and toss them where needed. When compared to all the effort of stuffing bags, and the cost of buying a box of them, it just might be easier.
    I used to dread the raking, burning and disposal of leaves, but now, I'm like you, I welcome them each Fall!

  • @greggy553
    @greggy553 3 года назад +22

    Keep the mulch deep enough and you will never have to weed your garden.

  • @flatsville1
    @flatsville1 3 года назад +1

    In the past I built rectangular wire cages using T posts & cattle/wire fencing in the fall. Strew the instde area with 1/2 finished compost (to give worms a heads up) and covered with 2-4 ft of shreded leaves. Then raked off what didn't decompose down to mulch in the spring. The remaining leaves get penned up again, but do decompose much faster on second round having been innoculated. I then have a ready source of composted leaves for fall garden beds.
    Leaves beat woodchips for annual veg & veg perennial beds. Woodchip are good for pathways & tree mulch. Conditioned, screened wood are good for berry shrubs.
    I am about to the point were small scale vermicomposting & traditional composting (for innoculation purposes) is all that's necessary. The leaves take care of the rest.
    Pee in a bottle & pour urine on your leaves for faster breakdown.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад

      Sounds like you have an efficient system going at your place. I couldn't agree more on leaves- they've done wonders for my gardens.

  • @amwartwork
    @amwartwork 2 года назад +3

    ITS very sad that peope dont know this stuff in generl but know more about shallow things like nicky minaj's album titles

  • @Splimbo
    @Splimbo 3 года назад +2

    Dont even have a yard yet but ive been stockpiling information about gardening for no reason hoping that when i do end up gardening people will think im a genius lol

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад

      This is about the single best thing I've ever done for my soil.

  • @tbluemel
    @tbluemel 3 года назад +6

    Damn, this is a GREAT video!

  • @shammydammy2610
    @shammydammy2610 3 года назад +2

    This definitely works. Used to do it at my old place and all of my neighbors knew I would take their leaves off of their hands.

  • @sharonwhite1629
    @sharonwhite1629 3 года назад +3

    I have a small pecan orchard. (36 trees) I had read that pecan trees and their leaves, wood mulch and even roots may have similar compound as black walnut. I do have a large mulberry tree, couple of ash trees and a few fruit trees I can use but very difficult to keep leaves separated with the wind. I am a novice gardener and just beginning. Any comments or advice?

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +2

      Hi Sharon - I wasn't aware that Pecan trees also had Juglone. I just looked it up, and it appears to be the case. There are a few options you could try. The first being compost the leaves. The microbes will break down the Juglone over time.
      The second option would be to just try to only use leaves in areas where you don't plant veggies that die of Juglone. Tomatoes are supposed to be particularly susceptible. This has about all the plants I have been able to find documentation on: growitbuildit.com/plants-poisoned-from-juglone-black-walnut/
      If you were to compost the leaves, or even apply it as mulch, you could test it out on an extra tomato plant. And just see how it was effected vs the others. You may find that the amount of juglone is small by the time growing season rolls around, and the plant is unaffected. Or, you may just lose one plant.

    • @sharonwhite1629
      @sharonwhite1629 3 года назад +2

      Thank you for the great advice. This will be something I need to experiment with and continue to research.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +1

      Hi Sharon - I thought of something else that might interest you. I do compost some black walnut sawdust and wood shavings, as I sometimes use that kind of wood. I have never noticed an adverse effect. But, the proportion of Walnut material in the compost would be very low. So, take that for what it is worth. I just thought you would like to know that.

    • @sharonwhite1629
      @sharonwhite1629 3 года назад +2

      Thank you again. I recently bought an electric wood chipper and put some of the pecan wood chips in my recent very first compost pile. But again not many. Also the wood was very dry. I’ll use them primarily in walking paths but will experiment as you suggested.

  • @taramellow3016
    @taramellow3016 3 года назад +3

    Thank you!!! I just bagged my last fall leaves ever!!!! Never again! Please keep the videos coming!!!

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад

      Will Do Tara - my results were awesome. I hope yours are too!

  • @ZE308AC
    @ZE308AC 3 года назад +6

    Just imagine if people left the leaves pile up in the backyard to improvement on the soil.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +1

      I know - they would save a ton on fertilizer.

    • @simpleminded5215
      @simpleminded5215 3 года назад +1

      If you leave them piled up on grass you will kill every bit of grass the leaves cover. Learned that the hard way in my early twenties at the house we rented. Wasn’t a good experience. 🤔

    • @danarzechula3769
      @danarzechula3769 3 года назад

      @@simpleminded5215 oh I don't know
      Less grass more room for vegetables..

  • @felixyusupov7299
    @felixyusupov7299 Год назад

    I use my DR chipper to shred leaves. I run the leaves through the chipper top hopper twice and the dry leave basically turn to 1/8" pieces which are attractive mulch. I load up my flower beds every year with leaf mulch.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  Год назад

      I think if I had a chipper I would probably do the same Felix.

  • @MasterKenfucius
    @MasterKenfucius 3 года назад +4

    Do yourself a favor and get some wood chips! You'll accellerate what you're trying to do by 10x. I went from sand to deep organic soil in less than 2 years.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад

      Fully agree with you. I just like the price of leaves!

    • @MasterKenfucius
      @MasterKenfucius 3 года назад +5

      @@growitbuildit I don't pay anything for wood chips. Find a tree service that chips them and doesn't want to pay dumping fees at the landfill and they will be happy to bring them to you for FREE... as many as you can handle! I used to get several 75 cu yd trucks full of them because the tree service would have to pay $400 to dump those at the landfill. They saved a ton of money and I got free chips. That's going to change your life!

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад +1

      Cool. Thanks for the tip

    • @tilinfoster
      @tilinfoster 3 года назад

      It depends on where you are located. Wood chips completely dried out our sandy soil and didn't degrade like the leaves did. If you are mimicking a forest floor, wood chips are not as prevalent as leaves. With leaves we have organic soil within months.

    • @MasterKenfucius
      @MasterKenfucius 3 года назад

      @@tilinfoster Saying that wood chips dried your sandy soil is like saying that coffee grounds made your water cleaner. If your soil was still dry after the chips, imagine what it would have been like without them being that they retain water while sand just let the water trickle down. Leaves are nutriet rich and will decay faster than the chips but you will need them piled 6-10 feet high to get the same biomass that 12 inches of hard-wood chips provide. The chips give you the advantage of keeping the weeds out for much longer than if you get a bunch of organic matter quickly. Woods chips retain water. You just didn't get any rain. Wood rots with moisture because fungi eat it all up. Once that gets destroyed then the worms move in and start consuming the little pieces, and that's why you keep adding another 3-4 inch layer of wood chips every year... to keep that cycle going.

  • @TheCman5015PLPro
    @TheCman5015PLPro 7 месяцев назад

    Thanks for this video! I learned this late in the winter so I suppose I'll just build up a pile of leaves (of which I am still collecting), shred them in the spring and pile up the shreds around my summer vegetables growers so they don't get scorch in the summer heat. I'd love to repeat what you did though, with the leaves that I decide not to shred. My backyard soil is garbage, and using a large amount of acquired leaves to strengthen the organic matter in the soil would be perfect.
    Definitely a good note to not just dig the leaves into the soil. Last thing I want is to suck the nitrogen out. I barely have a way as it is to replenish that, since I'm just starting a proper compost pile.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  7 месяцев назад

      Hi - this has been working for me ever since. I add about 2" of black soil depth to my garden each year. And digging is wholly unnecessary! Check out my latest leaf mulch update to see what I mean!

  • @billhoffman6441
    @billhoffman6441 2 года назад

    I did this for the first time in 2020. My garden in 2021 was the absolute best it has ever grown. I am doing this again. I ran over the leaves with my lawn mower and bagged them. Then dumped the bags of leaves in the garden. and spread evenly over the beds. I have raised beds. the original ground where my garden sits is all shale and rock. The garden beds are really nice and soft for the first oule of inches. I definitely recommend this as it really does work. Most of the leaves I have are rom birch trees.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  2 года назад

      Thanks Bill - You experience seems to be the same as mine .

  • @WoodRanger138
    @WoodRanger138 2 года назад +2

    What a Great Service to the new wave of gardeners. You are thorough and patient. Thank You Brother

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  2 года назад +1

      Thank you! This is the single easiest thing you can do to for your soil that I've found. And it doesn't cost any money.

  • @samlair3342
    @samlair3342 Год назад

    I do both ‘leaf mold composting’ in piles (using the bags of leaves put out on the curb by the neighbors) & using my mulching lawn mower to shred the leaves in place where they fall in my yard. I even chunk small green limbs and twigs into four inch lengths around the yard. Very little in the way of greenery escapes being reduced back into soil.
    I started out with almost no soil on a limestone slope - now, after thirty years, I’ve got thick healthy grass on several inches of good soil that needs minimal watering.

  • @williammikell2210
    @williammikell2210 3 года назад +2

    nice video. I have been "gutter shopping" for leaf bags for years and I get a lot. My record is 77 bags in one day. I try to get about 100 bags each season. Bags with leaves and grass clippings are the best.
    I also use rotting wood, especially to mulch around trees and shrubs (blueberries). Wood that is cut for firewood that gets rotten, dead limbs/sticks on the ground, and bark are all great for fungi.

    • @growitbuildit
      @growitbuildit  3 года назад

      Sounds like you have quite the system. That is awesome. I'm expanding my efforts each year.

  • @sunshine5349
    @sunshine5349 3 года назад +1

    i USED TO SPEND DAYS doing this, then I found a local gated golf course that gave away composted leaves and even loaded them on your truck for FREE. One bucket full is close to a ton. I'd estimate equivalent to 100 bags of leaves. If you dont' have time most cities will sell composted leaves for a modest cost as well. a lto less work and faster!

  • @dano956
    @dano956 3 года назад +2

    Where I live plastic trash bags are banned for leaves and they must be put in paper bags which make great weed barrier. I collect as many as I can every fall.