Mulch "MANIA"

Barbara J. Bromley, Mercer County Horticulturist 1998

Over the last several years some landscapers and grounds maintenance professionals have mounded shredded organic mulches at the bases of trees and shrubs. Thinking this practice to be both attractive and acceptable, the public started copying it. Such applications may cause damage if improperly applied. The use of mulch has gained acceptance over the past 20 years to improve the appearance of a landscape planting and can be very useful. In addition to looking nice, properly applied organic mulches help to:

However, piling mulch on the trunks and stems of woody plants and heaped to excessive depths is worse than using no mulch at all. This detrimental "mulch mounding" practice is causing some of the following problems:

A maximum (less is OK too) of 3 inches of mulch on silt loam or other heavy clay soils or 4 inches on sandier soils is enough to be beneficial and to look nice. Any depth exceeding 3-4 inches, even away from the trunk, has the potential to keep the soil, especially heavy clay, too wet. As the mulch decays it will eventually raise the grade around the plant if more is added each year.

There should be a 2 to 6 inch gap between the flare of the trunk and the start of the mulch. (This is sometimes called "doughnut" mulching, because the trunk is in the hole.) This gap reduces the incidence of vole damage, of adventitious root development, of stem canker, and rot diseases, and the possibility that insects will invade water softened tissue.

Professionals owe it to the public to set a good example. Homeowners owe it to themselves to stop allowing this practice to persist on their own properties and at their public buildings and parks.

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