Most seedlings seem to making their way through it!

I’m hoping stuff like the radishes can get through though, beans are going gang busters with it though, seems to have helped the peas as well. Generally everything since the tops been kept moist!

  • NataliePortland
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    11 days ago

    I do the same thing. I get clean pesticide free straw bales very cheap, about the price of a 6 pack. Straw insulates and helps the beds retain moisture. I use it to hill up the potatoes. Then you can leave it over the winter and in the spring your beds will be so amazingly soft and full of worms. The straw blocks the soil from getting compacted by the rain, and worms will run around loosening the soil.

    When you remove the straw it’s halfway rotted. Perfect stuff to make compost with, I like to add my Austrian winter peas to the straw, run them through my lawnmower to chop it all up.

    Some people here have said wood chips but you should never put wood chips on vegetable beds. It can be okay around your flower beds but use it sparingly. When wood chips break down they use up the nitrogen in the soil. Straw doesn’t have that effect.

    • @mojofrododojo
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      210 days ago

      run them through my lawnmower to chop it all up.

      yo got a link or how to? this is fascinating but I can’t see efficiently mowing back and forth over a pile lol

      • @rdyoung
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        -2111 days ago

        I wouldn’t say it’s a form of mulch. Mulch tends to be thicker and heavier and is more likely to smother plants. You can put straw down too heavy but it’s easier with mulch.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 days ago

          mulch
          noun
          a covering, as of straw, compost, or plastic sheeting, spread on the ground around plants to prevent excessive evaporation or erosion, enrich the soil, inhibit weed growth, etc.

          • @rdyoung
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            -3811 days ago

            Where is that coming from because I’ve always known mulch as the wood chips and plastic sheeting as something else.

            Plus, please go have a drink and a smoke because you are nit picking where there are no nits nor need to be this pedantic. Also, are you incapable of having a conversation without having to be “right” all the time?

            • @Ledivin
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              2811 days ago

              Plus, please go have a drink and a smoke because you are nit picking where there are no nits nor need to be this pedantic.

              The person pushing their specialized, incorrect definition says we should stop nit-picking, y’all. We just need to agree with whatever he says, no matter what

              Also, are you incapable of having a conversation without having to be “right” all the time?

              You’re one comment deep and are whining already. Get a grip, yo.

              • @rdyoung
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                -2611 days ago

                Wow, you guys are toxic and mentally stressed. I can disagree with what people call mulch. My entire life between growing my own stuff, working retail like home depot, tgt, etc, I’ve never had people call straw or sheeting of any kind “mulch”. Wood? Yep, mulch. Chopped up car tires or other rubber? Yep, mulch. Straw or pine needles? Normally just reffered to as ground covering. I’ve been gardening and growing shit for damn near 30 years. I was growing stuff outside of an apt that had zero accessible dirt and only concrete to work with.

                The fact that you think that is whining after someone had to play the well actually game on a post about gardening tells me all I need to know about you and I thank you for sticking your head up so I can block you. At least lemmy does blocks right.

                Have a nice day now.

                • @Ledivin
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                  6 days ago

                  The fact that you think that is whining after someone had to play the well actually game on a post about gardening tells me all I need to know about you and I thank you for sticking your head up so I can block you. At least lemmy does blocks right.

                  Nobody did this. Someone corrected you because you were wrong, and you proceeded to throw a fit instead of just taking in new information. Nobody was insulting until you started acting like a fucking toddler.

                • @kellyv
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                  11 days ago

                  I can disagree with what people call mulch.

                  You’re disagreeing with an established and printed definition. Asinine. Quite frankly it doesn’t matter that you’ve “never had people call straw or sheeting any kind of mulch”, you’re wrong. Get over it, maybe go have a drink and a smoke?

                  You were wrong about what you knew what mulch was, get over it. Now you know the proper definition and can move on knowing the correct meaning. Stop being an obtuse cunt.

                  I’ve been gardening and growing shit for damn near 30 years. I was growing stuff outside of an apt that had zero accessible dirt and only concrete to work with.

                  And yet, somehow, you’re still definitively wrong!

                  At least lemmy does blocks right.

                  I wish they could get their users right so ignoramuses like you wouldn’t even be a problem. Chortle my balls.

            • @SchmidtGeneticsOP
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              1011 days ago

              Anything can be a mulch from what I’ve seen. Even rocks. A mulch is defined as a covering.

            • @Jimbabwe
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              911 days ago

              You nitpicked when you incorrectly said straw wasn’t mulch.

              • @rdyoung
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                -1811 days ago

                If you think that comment was being nit picky, send me your address so I can send you a dictionary.

                • @kellyv
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                  1211 days ago

                  Oh, so you do have a dictionary? Why don’t you read the definition of mulch first and tell us all what it says.

            • NoIWontPickAName
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              511 days ago

              I’ve heard mulch as anything you use to cover the ground.

              Compost, straw, bark etc…

            • @kellyv
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              411 days ago

              Plus, please go have a drink and a smoke because you are nit picking where there are no nits nor need to be this pedantic. Also, are you incapable of having a conversation without having to be “right” all the time?

              Similarly, you should please go have a drink and a smoke because you can’t seem to come to terms with being wrong on a simple definition. It’s embarrassing honestly. Learn a new definition today and change for the better.

            • @MonkRome
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              310 days ago

              Also, are you incapable of having a conversation without having to be “right” all the time?

              The lack of self awareness in this sentence is of monumental proportions, the only one getting their ego wrapped into this conversation was you. I’m guessing you had a bad day, making it harder to have perspective, but maybe self reflect after you have some time to chill…

    • @SchmidtGeneticsOP
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      1011 days ago

      Want their marketing spiel?

      It’s an organic mulch, I contemplated using my grass clippings, I wanted hemp, but all was online order and it was the weekend. Can also use leaves.

      End of the year, I can just compost it into my soil by tilling it.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 days ago

      I believe we use the cedar bark chunks (the red or brown chunks of wood) to try to keep pest plants from taking root, is the straw to keep moisture in?

      Edit: Yay, I was right

    • @evasive_chimpanzee
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      510 days ago

      In addition to retaining moisture and preventing growth of weeds, it also greatly increases the albedo of the soil. It’s a fairly underrated benefit, I think. Nice, dark soil can really soak up heat on those hot summer days. If you need your soil to warm up, like in early spring, you can keep the straw off. It also helps with erosion during rain. If you’ve ever grown a low-lying green like spinach, you know how dirty it can get due to soil splashing it up, and straw helps with that, too.

      The downsides are that it’s weirdly stupidly expensive for the name brand product (gardenstraw) considering that it’s a waste product.

      Getting regular old straw from a hardware store or local farm can be risky because it can contain a lot of weed seeds, and it can have herbicides that can kill your garden. It’s also generally longer pieces than the purpose made stuff, so it’s less convenient when you are placing it.

    • @rdyoung
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      311 days ago

      It simultaneously protects the seeds from birds or other jerks and keeps the soil moist longer

    • @SchmidtGeneticsOP
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      411 days ago

      Actually didn’t mind the look, thought about doing grass clippings, but weeds and I’m not sure about the nitrogen fixing from the clover. Maybe I’ll try on of the small beds next year with that.

  • merde alors
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    11 days ago

    in that case, be careful about your sources. You wouldn’t want to introduce pesticides, herbicides, fungicides you try to avoid ( if that’s what you do), through straws from a poison farm

    i would have kept those straw beds 3, 4 times thicker

    • @SchmidtGeneticsOP
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      511 days ago

      They seem to be good

      Honestly, I wanted to go with hemp, but it was all online order and wouldn’t have gotten here fast enough. Which is strange with them being local, I can’t just drive there.Hempalta

      I agree, they recommend 2” thick, but I’m worried about the seedlings making it through. The radish tops would barely crest the top by harvest time?

      • merde alors
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        24 days ago

        but I’m worried about the seedlings making it through.

        just make an opening with your hand where you seed/plant and your plants grow towards the light

        • @SchmidtGeneticsOP
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          14 days ago

          Only a few of my stuff is planted in rows, most is scatter planted. Limits my options unfortunately. Learning stuff though.

          • merde alors
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            3 days ago

            i never plant in rows. I use those openings as markers :)

            i never plant in rows. I use those openings as markers :)

  • @Eheran
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    410 days ago

    Just know that slugs love it below that stuff too.

    • @SchmidtGeneticsOP
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      19 days ago

      Can’t say I’ve ever seen one, I know they can be here, but it’s usually dry, doesn’t rain often so stuff doesn’t stay very wet. Now that we have talked I’m sure I’ll get some now though haha.

    • @SchmidtGeneticsOP
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      411 days ago

      Some does yeah, I can’t keep the top as moist as I would like with the watering restrictions though.

      We get really bad gusts, otherwise I think it would be fine.

  • @whyrat
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    211 days ago

    Since we see a lawn in the background; consider using your lawn clippings too, they make a good garden mulch layer; very similar to straw.

    • NataliePortland
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      311 days ago

      If I used my grass clippings I would end up seeding my garden beds with grass. Straw can have some seeds but generally very little

      • @SchmidtGeneticsOP
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        10 days ago

        Doesn’t most grass species take a couple months to go to seed and dry to be viable? I would worry about spreading other weeds that couldn’t get established through the ground cover, but would excel in the fresh dirt. But that shouldn’t add much more than what was naturally already there though?

    • @SchmidtGeneticsOP
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      211 days ago

      I worry about the clover and excess nitrogen, and wouldn’t that become a bit more hard packed and make it hard for seedlings? If I had just a bed of starts I think that’s a great idea though.