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mamala_gw

No till shade bed under a tree

mamala
14 years ago

Has anyone had success planting a no-till shade bed under a tree?

I would like to plant an area with a radius of 7' to 10+' under a maple that gives dappled light. The grass and broad leaf weeds grow fine. It is at the base of a slope, so it receives plenty of moisture.

Any advice or recommendations?

Comments (5)

  • oilpainter
    14 years ago

    I don't know what you mean by- no till. You couldn't till under a tree anyway. If you are looking for some kind of plant that would do well under a tree try lamium. It has white and green leaves and clusters of purple flowers in late June. It is fast growing and takes plenty of abuse. I have it edging my flower bed that goes up to a tree and I am forever pulling off parts because it is crowding out my Hosta. You would only need 3 or 4 plants and it would fill in. You would have to dig out clumps occasionally

  • mamala
    Original Author
    14 years ago

    Oh, I have plenty of lovelies to put under the tree - hosta, astilbe, pulmonaria, brunnera, anemone, ajuga, ferns, and yes - georgeous lamium. But I'll keep my eye on it ;)

    I was hoping to just smother the existing grass and weeds with newspaper, cutting through to plant, and then topping with wood chips. I want to avoid using any chemical weedkillers, but I also don't want to create bigger problems in the future.

    Do you think it can work?

  • ptilda
    14 years ago

    I did something similar in a couple of different ways: 1. put (wet) cardboard/newspaper in a fairly thick layer. Cover with rotted manure & compost. Let this sit for a couple of weeks. when you dig, the cardboard/newspaper should be mostly rotted & the weeds killed.
    2. Turn sod/soil. Cover with several inches of compost/manure. Cover all that with heavy plastic (I got mine from a local farm that cuts it off their silage pile), use rocks to weight down edges. cut holes larger than the plants, in order to allow for growth & water to get to the soil & to avoid rotting the roots. Plant & cover it all with mulch. You can't see the plastic, but it keeps weeds down, holds moisture in & helps warm/insulate the ground in the spring here in my Zone 3.

  • arcy_gw
    14 years ago

    I too have used the smother method. It worked well. If you have a weed trimmer a very close shave first gets you off on the right direction. Hosta are great for these spots. I have put one eye in a hole I could barely eak out of between roots and they have managed to find their way in and around the roots and filled in nicely.

  • mamala
    Original Author
    14 years ago

    Good to hear. I don't plan on tilling, since it is a maple with very shallow roots, but I do like the idea of topping with compost, and that the hostas will fill out nicely.

    Thank you.