Gardening With Straw Saves Time, Money, and Sanity!
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Thanks Doreen for the great article. I live a little south of you in Aurora and started using straw as mulch this year. I only put a thin layer (less than an inch) over my radishes and carrots as the seeds are directly sown. I was concerned about the seedlings sprouting up through it. Do you think it would be OK to put a thicker layer on for my fall plantings?
After seeds sprout and you thin, put a thick layer of straw mulch on, around each seedling. A good trick with carrot and radish seeds is to place a strip of toliet paper over the newly sown seeds. It breaks with each watering or rain storm and becomes part of the soil. The paper holds enough moisture close to the seed to aid germination.
Following up on TimCAD's Q&A...I have just directly sowed many seeds...lettuce, carrots, green beans, peas... and have added a 1"-ish layer of straw as mulch. In your answer, are you suggesting NOT to use straw as mulch at this point, but to wait til I have growth, and then add straw? If so, what do you suggest I use as mulch? I live in a very dry area and want to use something for water retention. Thanks.
i have used straw in my veg garden for years, and really good on holding the weeds too.
Every time I use straw to mulch my garden, it gets loaded with sprouted wheat, whose roots grow deep so fast that I am unable to pull it all. I never remember this happening when I lived up North--is the wheat harvested differently in the South? It takes me years to remove the ever sprouting wheat from my garden. I've recently tried it again after not using it for over 20 years. I used old straw that we used in our dog's house the previous winter, believing that the remaining grain would have fallen from the seed heads. Boy was I wrong! I have spent hours an hours pulling wheat from my garden yet again, defeating the no-weeding goal. Am I doing something wrong? Digging wheat out in over 100 degree heat is getting old. Help!
Both my mother-in-law and I use newspaper under the straw as an extra weed barrier. This prevents wheat from sprouting and does a great job of snuffing out weeds. The only real problem I see with this method it if I want to plant something new I either have to buy a start or start it inside since a seed wont germinate, but if you only want to keep the weeds out, this may be a good solution for you. :)
Same problem here. I used straw in my weed free garden only to find I am a wheat farmer now. Time to get the tiller out in this 100 degree weather. I don't know if I will use straw again unless it is very clean.
As an old farm girl (think 1950's and 60's!) I can't help but explain that straw is NOT the bottom half of hay stalks but it IS the lower part of wheat after it is harvested. Thus the beautiful golden color and the mostly empty pods on the heads of each "straw". I too have lots of it in my garden and the potatoes are doing very nicely in the 3 ft high pile of straw in which the row is growing. Can't wait until it's time to harvest them!
Newspapers ( check and see if they use soy based ink)cover with wood chips holds moisture and keeps the weed in check.
Do you till the straw in after the harvest or do you remove it?