Do You Know Which is the Best Mulch to Use for Trees?
Posted: Tuesday, June 20, 2006
by Carlo Morelli
OnlineTips.org Home and Garden Tips
One question that comes up this time of year a lot is what is the proper mulch to use for trees. It’s easy to grasp the basic premise of mulch, but when people go to their local nursery they see many different kinds. How do you know which one to use? The short answer: wood chips.
The very best mulch to use for trees is something that is going to decompose gradually. Mulch made from wood chips fits the bill perfectly, since it rots slowly, and as an added bonus, this mulch is quite low in nutrients so will not encourage weed growth. Composted wood chips are the preferred material these can be used as durable, low-maintenance mulch, which weathers to a silver-gray color.
Organic mulches are advantageous also for their soil-enhancing characteristics, as opposed to inorganic mulch materials like crushed rock, gravel, tarps, and landscape fabrics. As organic mulches decompose over time, they slowly discharge tiny quantities of nutrients and to the soil. Therefore your layer of mulch should be renewed as needed to maintain a 2- to 4-inch depth.
For individual trees, your mulched area should cover from 3 to 6 feet out from the tree’s base. It is best to clear the mulch away 1 to 2 inches from the base of plants to help prevent damage to the tree trunk from insects, excess moisture, and diseases. In fact, this is the classic mistake that many people make with mulching trees. You shouldn’t have a pile of wood chips around your tree that resembles the thing Richard Dreyfuss made in his kitchen in Close Encounters of the Third Kind. Rather, it should look more like a flattened donut. This also holds true for mulching shrubs, by the way.
Follow these simple tips and your tree should do well and require less watering and fertilizer than an unmulched tree.
Visit www.onlinetips.org for tips on composting tumblers.
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Top-level comments on this article: (1 total)The author makes some good points about applying mulch. The author also dares to mention that wood chips are the best type of mulch. What I miss in the article is what type of wood chip is the best as different woods vary of course. Also, what is the ideal size a wood chip should be? The larger the wood chip the more you need to apply as there are more air pockets. Although the title states
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