Avoid using weed-barrier cloth in the garden – Redlands Daily Facts

2023-01-06 15:45:33 By : Mr. Zhongbin Shen

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It’s great that many people are replacing lawns with low-water landscaping. But along with trees not getting adequate water, one concern is the widespread use of weed-barrier cloth, including at the Redlands fire station demonstration gardens.

Linda Chalker-Scott, an extension urban horticulturist and associate professor at Washington State University, has written about the increasing use of geotextiles, which are woven so that water and gas exchange can occur and light penetration is reduced. As a result, fewer weed seeds germinate.

Chalker-Scott said they can be effective in agricultural situations, in annual planting beds or where the landscape is regularly disturbed and the fabrics can be replaced when needed.

“For permanent landscapes, however, they are not a long-term solution and in fact can hinder landscape plant health,” she wrote.

While it might help with weeds initially, here is our experience, some reasons not to use weed cloth and some suggestions if you already have it.

Bad for soil health, organisms and weeds long term

Bettina McLeod runs the school garden project at Cope Middle School and has been ripping out the weed cloth she discovers from previous landscaping.

“Earthworms get stuck in it and die, roots penetrate it so you can’t pull the weeds out, and it breaks up after years, leaving little fragments, and who knows what it’s made of,” she said.

Weed cloth is also one of April Garbat’s pet peeves. The Whittier-based landscape designer and International Society of Arboriculture-certified arborist said the hard-packed soil underneath weed cloth seems dead and smells like dust with no visible organisms.

“That’s partly because weed cloth interferes with the natural process where leaves fall to the ground and mulch the plants from which they fell, renewing the soil community. The dark-colored plastic also heats the soil more than natural mulch does and may not allow much water through to the soil,” Garbat said.

She finds that often the mulch or gravel on top doesn’t stay, so the fabric degrades, especially when exposed to sunlight. Then the weeds grow through.

“The most frustrating weeding I’ve done is trying to remove weeds that have either sprouted from under the fabric through tears or rooted in it from the top from seeds that blew in,” she said.

Although professional-grade fabric may last longer, weed cloth is a shortcut that Garbat said lasts only a few years.

Also, weed cloth is impenetrable for earthworms and all burrowing invertebrates. These include native bees, most of which nest in the ground and are increasingly becoming important as pollinators.

Inhibits changes to a garden

While many landscape designs are meant to grow and fill in over time, weed cloth can strangle a trunk or stem, and it prevents runners from plants that might be intended to spread out.

“Small succulents, large agave and grasses are common drought-tolerant plant choices, but they can’t spread out and fill in a space when weed cloth is used,” Garbat said.

Or a gardener may want to swap plants out but weed cloth makes these changes more difficult, as holes must be cut in the fabric in order to plant.

When to use it and what to use instead

Garbat has recommended using weed cloth under thick decomposed granite pathways where she doesn’t want plants to grow, and where it won’t surface. However, she doesn’t use it in flagstone paths where she is going to plant succulents or little groundcovers in between the stones.

Instead of weed cloth, both Chalker-Scott and Garbat recommend a three- to six-inch layer of wood mulch. Wood mulch left over from tree jobs can be found at no cost.

Imported wood mulches, such as gorilla hair, are available at nurseries and home improvement centers.

We were successful with just using mulch, both redwood and mulch from several dead trees and shrubs we had removed on our property and chipped. We paid to have most of our dead lawn dug out in 2008, and the first year we did pull out some grasses and weeds that came up, but really not that many.

Now, the mostly native plants have filled in, forming a great ecosystem, and weeds are minimal.

Our yard, at 315 Westwood Lane, Redlands, will be featured on this year’s Redlands Horticultural and Improvement Society garden tour April 16 and 17.

If it’s already there

For people who already have weed cloth, Garbat suggests making sure plants have lots of room cut out for them, at least the diameter of their root ball, and that it is a completely cut-out circle, not an X or slash.

“Then, as the weed cloth becomes visible and less effective in the following years, slowly remove swaths of it before you replenish the mulch,” she said.

Linda Richards lives in Redlands. Her website www.ifnaturecouldtalk.com.

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