Yardcare.com - all that your yard can be
Ask a Yardcare Question
search tips
Get Expert Advice On...
building a lawn
choosing grasses
lawn diseases
lawn restoration
maintenance
pests
weed control
water conservation
Select-a-Tool Advice...
blower/vacs
garden tools
irrigation systems
lawnmowers
riding lawnmowers
rakes
snowthrowers
string trimmers
Ask the Experts
Answer our Question of the Month
Tip of the Month
Read yardcare tips from our experts
Read about the latest yardcare trends

 

Weed Library


<< Weed Library Home

Mulching

by Barbara Pleasant

Mulch that's more than 2 inches thick can deprive most weed seeds of the light they need to germinate and grow. In vegetable and flower gardens, you can mulch with wheat straw (which has fewer weed seeds than hay), chopped leaves, grass clippings, or many other organic materials.

Where weeds are numerous, try covering the soil with four to six sheets of newspaper. Then cover the newspapers with 2 to 3 inches of organic mulch. Pieces of scrap carpeting make a good weed-suppressing mulch to use in pathways between rows. When mulching beneath shrubs and trees, place a sheet of landscape fabric over the soil, then cover it with 3 inches of organic mulch. An edging (a 4- to 6-inch-wide strip of rot-proof material driven into the ground vertically) of brick, stone, or metal will help the mulch stay put, halt invasion by creeping weeds, and make the bed look neat and well groomed.



Take control of your gardens and yard: Get advice for your particular yard region:
Get expert advice on outsmarting pesky weeds and pests:
Pest Control Library
Weed Control Library
Essential Planting Guide
weed control
Get lawn advice based on your Yard Style
Choose a region:
Canada
yardcare regions
 
Brought to you by Toro
glossary of terms | source list | media room | terms of use | site map | Contact Us | privacy notice
© 2006, The Toro Company