joz
Garden Ornament
(I don't know if this is better in the Composting forum, but most of my questions relate to the plants rather than the soil, so.......)
I just cut 3 new 2' wide rows along the fences in my backyard for a veggie garden. My backyard, and two of neighboring yards, are rather overrun with weeds, particularly against the fences (chain link, so great for trellising peas or cukes, but also great for weeds to climb and everyone to argue about which side of the fence the weed originates on and whether or not a weedwacker can reach it... blah blah blah).
I decided to mulch with newspaper, to try to eliminate those weeds and prevent them creeping back into those beds. I trenched a bit along the "front" of each bed and tucked the newspaper down, and then ran the paper up the back fence ~6" and laid some 2x4's on to hold it against the fence.
I know you're supposed to use a pretty thick layer of newspaper to keep the weeds down. How thick? How many sheets? Spread out, or piled together and then laid on?
I'm concerned that water won't penetrate the paper sufficiently to reach the roots below.
And I'm concerned that the paper that dries daily (it's pretty hot/sunny in New Orleans) will eventually become crusty and impervious.
AND I'm concerned that any veggies in lower spots may drown in the collected water before it soaks in and dissipates.
(I didn't do a very good job smoothing the bed before the paper went down, which I didn't notice until the paper went down, and moving a bunch of soggy newspaper is rather difficult.)
I was considering creating (squishing into the fluffy bed) wee pools between the plants, so the water could collect there and then gradually soak into the ground around the plants.
I am planning on putting some pinestraw mulch atop the newspaper, because neither I nor my neighbors want to look at that much newspaper in the yard.
Any thoughts, or links to previous discussions, would be most welcome. The searches I ran didn't turn up much in-depth info.
I just cut 3 new 2' wide rows along the fences in my backyard for a veggie garden. My backyard, and two of neighboring yards, are rather overrun with weeds, particularly against the fences (chain link, so great for trellising peas or cukes, but also great for weeds to climb and everyone to argue about which side of the fence the weed originates on and whether or not a weedwacker can reach it... blah blah blah).
I decided to mulch with newspaper, to try to eliminate those weeds and prevent them creeping back into those beds. I trenched a bit along the "front" of each bed and tucked the newspaper down, and then ran the paper up the back fence ~6" and laid some 2x4's on to hold it against the fence.
I know you're supposed to use a pretty thick layer of newspaper to keep the weeds down. How thick? How many sheets? Spread out, or piled together and then laid on?
I'm concerned that water won't penetrate the paper sufficiently to reach the roots below.
And I'm concerned that the paper that dries daily (it's pretty hot/sunny in New Orleans) will eventually become crusty and impervious.
AND I'm concerned that any veggies in lower spots may drown in the collected water before it soaks in and dissipates.
(I didn't do a very good job smoothing the bed before the paper went down, which I didn't notice until the paper went down, and moving a bunch of soggy newspaper is rather difficult.)
I was considering creating (squishing into the fluffy bed) wee pools between the plants, so the water could collect there and then gradually soak into the ground around the plants.
I am planning on putting some pinestraw mulch atop the newspaper, because neither I nor my neighbors want to look at that much newspaper in the yard.
Any thoughts, or links to previous discussions, would be most welcome. The searches I ran didn't turn up much in-depth info.