PROPER
MULCHING
SAVES TIME, MONEY, AND PLANTS
Mulching your landscape has many benefits for your garden, but the reason most homeowners mulch is to give their property a dramatic finished look. Your plants and flowers pop out with mulch.
SAVES TIME, MONEY, AND PLANTS
There are multiple types of mulch to choose from: Chips, nuggets or shredded as well as color choices from natural to red or black.. |
Mulching your landscape has many benefits for your garden, but the reason most homeowners mulch is to give their property a dramatic finished look. Your plants and flowers pop out with mulch.
Properly
used mulch suppresses weeds, keeps the soil moist, and maintains the soil
temperature. This will help keep your plants healthy and reduce maintenance,
especially weeding during the summer months.
Usually
one or two inches of mulch with 5 inches of space between the base of trees
and/or the stems of shrubs is a good rule of thumb. Three inches on areas that have never been mulched before will help suppress weed seeds from germinating.
The main functions of mulch are to suppress weeds, maintain moisture and control fluctuating soil temperatures. |
Mulching
trees and shrubs is a recommended cultural maintenance method with many
benefits, yet it can literally kill plants if mulch is applied improperly.
VOLCANO MULCHING KILLS TREES AND SHRUBS
A
mountain of mulch, piled high against the tree trunk, does not kill a tree
immediately but will result in a slow death. Over-mulching is a waste of mulch and money. It is a leading cause of
death for azalea, rhododendron, dogwood, boxwood, mountain laurel, hollies,
cherry trees, ash, birch, linden, spruce, and many other landscape plants.
Mulching properly has many benefits, but "volcano mulching" sets your trees and shrubs on the path to a slow death. |
How
does over-mulching kill trees and shrubs?
·
Lack of
oxygen to tree roots. This is especially common in the spring and
the fall, which are critical periods for root growth, and during other wet
periods. Symptoms may take several years to appear.
·
Inner
bark death. This comes from the piles of mulch placed directly against the
stems/trunks of trees and shrubs. (This can also happen to trees planted too
deeply. Carefully follow directions when planting trees and bushes.)
All living things on Earth require water and oxygen, including plants. Volcano mulching suffocates roots at the base of your trees. |
·
Fungal
and bacterial diseases. Moisture is required to spread and reproduce
these diseases. Trunk diseases gain a foothold into the moist, decaying bark
tissue under the mulch. Once established, the disease organisms ultimately
invade the inner bark, starving the plant and finally killing the tree.
·
Excess
heat. This is created when wet mulch starts to heat up and begins to
decompose the lower bark.
· Rodents such as mice and voles. These creatures live under the warm mulch
in the winter and chew on the nutritious inner bark. Often this goes unnoticed
until the following spring when the "tree doesn’t look good”.
Information in this article is from Rutgers Cooperative Extension Fact Sheet FS099 Deborah Smith-Fiola,
Agricultural Agent, Ocean County
In newly mulched areas a layer of 2 sheets of wet black & white newspaper helps to suppress weed seeds and saves mulch. |
Happy Gardening,
James