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Get the details on one of the best things you can do for your garden: Mulch it!
Sure, adding mulch to your garden and landscape makes your plantings look terrific, but it also accomplishes many great things for both plants and soil. Mulch can also reduce the amount of work you're doing in your garden by helping you out with watering and weeds. Here's why mulch could be considered a gardener's best friend.
Benefits of Mulch
You won't need to water as much. A layer of garden mulch helps soil retain moisture longer because the sun's warmth won't bake the top layers of soil. When rain comes, that same mulch layer helps slow storm water run-off, so more rain soaks into the soil. Garden mulch also helps prevent soil compaction during downpours, keeping soil light and fluffy, which is a key to healthy root systems.
You'll have to do less weeding. When you cover soil with mulch, sunlight can't reach weed seeds, so many won't germinate. Weeds that blow in and settle in the mulch may sprout, but they will be much easier to pull.
Your plants get some disease-fighting help. Many plant diseases begin in the soil and spread to plants through splashing raindrops. A mulch layer acts as a buffer between soil and plant leaves to help prevent disease spread. Plus, it can keep crops like lettuce, leafy greens, and cabbage cleaner (less work for you at harvest time!).
Your plants stay warmer. In cold weather regions, garden mulch protects plants against winter chill and frost heave, which occurs when soil freezes and thaws. A frost heave can push perennial crowns out of the soil and expose them to killing temperatures.
When it comes to types of mulch, you have lots of choices. Miracle-Gro Organic™ All Natural Mulch is dye-free and made from sustainable, locally sourced* wood. Other mulch options include wheat straw, pine straw, shredded leaves, untreated grass clippings, and even newspaper or cardboard.
How to Mulch
Apply mulch in a 3-inch-thick layer around, but not on top of, your plants. Use a thinner layer in colder regions and/or with heavier soil that retains moisture. Use a thicker layer in warmer regions and/or with sandy soils that dry quickly. Never pile mulch against plant stems, tree trunks, or perennial crowns, as doing so will block air circulation.
In colder regions, the best time to apply mulch is in late spring, after soil has warmed and before summer heat arrives. In late fall, after the ground freezes, apply additional mulch around plants you want to protect through winter, such as roses or tender perennials. In warmer regions, make sure to put mulch down before summer heat arrives.
It's kind of amazing, actually, that simply adding a layer of mulch can do so much for your garden—it's a pretty impressive return on investment, if you ask us!
*made with recycled green waste inputs, including diverted scrap wood from lumber processes, and manufactured less than 150 miles on average from the stores in which it is sold excluding AK & HI