mulching

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neil84

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mulching
« on: February 29, 2012, 20:05 »
I have planted some cuttings of currants and gooseberries in a nursery bed until they grow enough roots to move on to their final positions. What is best to use to keep down the weeds? ??? I am worried about using manure because of the risk it will rot the cuttings or burn them. The wood chippings i have access to have a high content of pine needles which i have been told to use only for paths by older plot holders. I think this has something to do with raising the acidity of the soil, and i have benefited from this elsewhere, by using it in planting my blueberries and cranberries. Also many of my cuttings are very short so i don't want to completely loose them in the mulch :ohmy: does anyone have experience of doing something similar? advise please, thank you. 

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mattwragg94

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Re: mulching
« Reply #1 on: February 29, 2012, 20:44 »
i agree with you pine needles wouldn't be a good idea - as you correctly say they will change the PH of your soil, reulting in it being more acidic.

can you get ahold of some leaf mould - this would be a good mulch.

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solway cropper

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Re: mulching
« Reply #2 on: February 29, 2012, 22:27 »
If you want to keep down the weeds could you not just pull them out?

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moose

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Re: mulching
« Reply #3 on: March 01, 2012, 09:21 »
After giving a good watering I mulch with straw. Keeps moisture in, weeds down and worms love it. Weeds that make it through are easy to get out. I get straw for £2.50 a bale so it is economical to buy and after 2 years I clear it away into the compost bins.

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JayG

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Re: mulching
« Reply #4 on: March 01, 2012, 09:32 »
Possibly not very helpful at this stage to suggest that a nursery bed should be weed-free to start off with to avoid competition with young plants or cuttings, but in any case I would have thought that unless you've gone into this on an industrial scale an occasional bit of careful hoeing or hand-weeding would be sufficient.

I wouldn't mulch with anything that might change the chemistry of the soil, nor cold-composted compost which is likely to contain weed seeds - have you any weed-free used compost you could use as a mulch?
Sow your seeds, plant your plants. What's the difference? A couple of weeks or more when answering possible queries!

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