digitS'
Garden Master
There were two reason for me to stop using mulch. One was in the paths between beds and its failure to kill bindweed. That vine with rhizomes could easily travel under the mulch from one side of a 2' path to the other. Even crabgrass can usually accomplish this. The other was that I created a good environment for voles.
It was possible for me to carry off many bales of rain-damaged alfalfa hay from a nearby farm when I lived in the country and I did that, using it to make compost. I also tried growing potatoes under mulch after emergence of the plants. The voles damaged every tuber with the exception of only one in an area about 20' by 50' of potatoes.
Cats? Yes, I had two. They helped me kill the voles when I was picking up the mulch to harvest the potatoes. Too late to be of much benefit for that season's crop -- which I left on the ground to freeze & rot.
Voles show up these days, primarily in the tomato plants. I have flooded the burrows successfully with a slow trickle of water. The occupants have disappeared and the burrow left vacant. Often however, I haven't' known about the burrow until the neighborhood coyote shoves the plants aside and digs up the location. I assume he is successful and, so far, any damage to the sprawled tomato on those occasions has been minor. This year, there is evidence of vole damage to fruit in the melon patch. Where Are My Coyotes!
Steve
It was possible for me to carry off many bales of rain-damaged alfalfa hay from a nearby farm when I lived in the country and I did that, using it to make compost. I also tried growing potatoes under mulch after emergence of the plants. The voles damaged every tuber with the exception of only one in an area about 20' by 50' of potatoes.
Cats? Yes, I had two. They helped me kill the voles when I was picking up the mulch to harvest the potatoes. Too late to be of much benefit for that season's crop -- which I left on the ground to freeze & rot.
Voles show up these days, primarily in the tomato plants. I have flooded the burrows successfully with a slow trickle of water. The occupants have disappeared and the burrow left vacant. Often however, I haven't' known about the burrow until the neighborhood coyote shoves the plants aside and digs up the location. I assume he is successful and, so far, any damage to the sprawled tomato on those occasions has been minor. This year, there is evidence of vole damage to fruit in the melon patch. Where Are My Coyotes!
Steve