OUR DEEP MULCH BACK TO EDEN GARDEN HAS TRULY BEEN AMAZING! IT NATURALLY CONSERVES WATER AND THERE TRULY IS NO WEEDING!
After 25 years of vegetable gardening, I would like to say we have perfectly successful gardens year after year. But, I cannot lie.
Our very first vegetable garden was the summer we built our house 25 years ago. We just tilled up the dirt right outside the back door, threw in some seeds and it grew!
It was insanely successful, considering we didn’t have a clue what we were doing. We didn’t know how to fertilize, and we didn’t know about seed starting indoors.
We just threw in the seeds and watered with one big rainbird sprinkler. And, we planted it all in soil leveled by a dozer and I’m sure there was no good topsoil left. But it grew…. and we were thrilled!
Two problems plagued my gardens through the years
After the excitement of the first season, I delved deep into vegetable gardening. The next year I read every gardening book and magazine (this was pre-internet days) I could get my hands on and designed a big garden plot.
Over the years our gardens have been very successful and we’ve grown and harvested oodles of veggies. But two things have always plagued me… weeds and watering. I tried many a method to solve those two problems, but have only found marginal success.
Watering Problems
If you have never visited south-central Washington state you probably wouldn’t know it is a desert. Washington is known as the evergreen state after all!
Well, not all of it. Most of the eastern half of the state, everything east of the Cascade Mountain Range, is a hot dry desert. Here in the southern part of the
But, being a desert, the ground dries out quickly and has to be irrigated carefully to produce a crop. Keeping the soil at the right moisture level is always tough here.
Weed Problems
And the weeds! We have terrible weeds here. Land left alone here is not green and lush with grasses and trees. Even as dry and hot as it is the weeds flourish. They will cover the ground like a carpet in a short time. And they are not nice weeds, they are thorns and thistles and get out of control and throw weed seed quickly.
We’ve tried weed barrier, hoeing, tilling, and spent hundreds of hours of hand weeding. We even tried mulching pathways but never had real success. The only mulch we had access to was fine bark mulch. It was quite expensive so we didn’t use much and it broke down quickly into the soil.
Deep Mulch Back to Eden garden…the real secret to a weed-free garden and perfect soil moisture
Over the last 2 years, I’ve read more and more about deep mulching. I decided it was time to invest in a LOT of wood mulch. Deep mulching promised to fix my two biggest problems…weeds and water.
A couple of years ago we found out about how to get semi-truck loads of wood mulch. There is a local company that grinds up old orchard trees in our area. And it is about 1/6th the cost of bark mulch. This was the mulch we needed. It is the ‘dirty’ mulch recommended for Back to Eden gardening.
Why garden with the deep mulch Back to Eden method?
The deep mulch Back to Eden method of gardening is the practice of mimicking how soil is effortlessly built in nature. It is trying to emulate in our garden the process God does in the wild.
When leaves, pine needles, or dead trees fall in nature they naturally decompose and create layers of compost. The soil in nature is not tilled, fertilized or watered by man and yet it thrives under those layers.
Meanwhile, we have hoed, tilled, dug and sweat a lot in our garden!
So, now we don’t till our garden. Instead, we layer on broken down compost and ground wood mulch. In this way, we are mimicking the natural processes God set forth in nature. Now I enjoy gardening more than ever! No brow breaking work!
We will repeat the process of layering each year as needed. With layers of nutrient-dense plant and chicken compost and mulch added it will get healthier with time.
Eventually, the soil will be light and fluffy and hold moisture like never before. It will have more natural fertilizers and compost available for plant growth and naturally deter weeds and pests.
How to use the mulch for a no-weed garden
So, how much mulch did we put down and where did we put it?
Mulch Basics
Before mulching, we prepared the garden by thoroughly digging all the weeds. You could
Once the weeds were removed we added a 1/2″ layer of compost. This was mostly fine leaves we had mown up in the lawn mower, mixed and composted together with chicken manure. We used a homemade hardware screen sifter to sift the compost before adding it to the garden. You can see how we did this at the end of the video in my spring garden post.
After this, we laid down a thick 5″ layer of shredded wood mulch.
This layering would best be done in the fall. Fall composting and mulching is more like nature. Trees lose lay down layers in fall and winter rain decomposes it.
Since we missed it last fall we went ahead and did it in the spring. This year, we will compost in the fall and layer on more mulch as needed.
Raised Bed Area
We initially mulched all the pathways between the raised beds and left the raised beds un
In the future, we plan to pull the mulch back far enough to seed or plant into the soil beneath. We will add new compost into those same holes when we transplant or seed each year. Once the seedlings are big enough we will pull the mulch back around them to prevent weeds and conserve water.
Open garden Row area
We have made 30″ raised rows in the past in an Eliot Coleman manner. This year we decided to save the time digging and shaping the rows. We just composted down a flat 24″ row where we have our drip irrigation lines. Then we mulched the rows and the pathways all the same.
We just pulled back the deep mulch wherever we wanted to transplant a seedling or plant a seed. When the plants were big enough to rise above the 4 or 5″ of mulch we pushed the mulch back up around the plants.
Is it really a no-weed garden?
So, here we are 12 weeks into our garden. And I am excited to report that it really is a no-weed garden! Ok…maybe only 99% weed free. I think 100% weed free will only happen in heaven. But, I never dreamed we could have such a carefree garden here on Earth!
Usually, by now, we would have had to weed all the beds and the pathways. Multiple times. I’m talking at least 3 or 4 hours of weeding and hoeing a week.
I am delighted to report that we have spent maybe 1 hour weeding the garden since we put down the mulch 12 weeks ago! Really, I might pull two or three little weeds a day as I am harvesting and watering. It just takes a couple of seconds and I’m done.
With the thick mulch, and the soil that stays moist underneath, any weeds that do take root are easily pulled
Our deep mulch back to eden Garden update Video
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My favorite Back to Eden videos
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Thanks so very much for joining me here in the farmhouse today!
All the feedback you’ve given on facebook,
Jennifer says
Thanks for sharing – I have been gardening for a few years and this is great info! Your garden is beautiful!
Julie Michener says
You’re welcome! Hope it helps your garden like it has mine!
Suzy Knapp says
Julie,
Your garden is beautiful. I love the idea of the deep mulch. After reading your post, I’m making plans to try to incorporate this idea into my flower beds! Thanks!
Julie Michener says
Thank you! We use the same wood mulch in all our flower beds. They do really well and it sure saves on the weeding.
Hope says
This was very interesting, I’m always looking for ways to improve my methods. We have such struggles gardening here where most of our garden spot is red clay.
Julie Michener says
Oh that would be tough! We are blessed with pretty good loamy soil here at our farm. I’m sure the mulch and compost combo would really help that clay soil.
Angela says
This sounds amazing! Definitely going to do more research on this!
Julie Michener says
It is so worth it! Happy gardening!
Marisa Tolsma says
Your garden is beautiful!
Julie Michener says
thanks Marisa!
Jenn says
We have done this too and it really makes life easier. I have heard that over time there can be problems with the soil, but cannot remember the issues now. For now I am a believer and haven’t seen the issues myself!
Julie Michener says
Great! The biggest problem I’ve seen is that people forget that the thing that makes it work is all the chicken compost. Mulch just conserves the moisture, acts as weed barrier and add organic matter. It is the feeding through the chicken compost that makes it successful. Still trying to figure out how much to add and how often.
Makayla says
So amazing! I’ve been wanting to start a garden. I have a mobile one right now because of how much we travel, but I’m so excited to be sustainable when we settle down! Thanks for the education!
Julie Michener says
Your welcome! Glad it was helpful!