It is seriously no joke, it is so easy. I started with 8 loads earlier this year and didn't have time to get to spread out the last 2. Now it is cooler, I'm out digging into the last two piles and they are black gold! Happy find. Can't get enough of this stuff. Nice video.
@TheMarkhamGardens7 күн бұрын
Definitely makes a huge difference!
@denniskeyes77138 ай бұрын
Bought the lot next door 80’ x 125’ and immediately started covering it with arborist chips. Halfway through my second layer. 23 varieties of fruit trees, incredible collards, etc. Hugelkultur raised beds in my backyard. Same principle. I never fertilize.
@TheMarkhamGardens8 ай бұрын
Yes sir!!! Best move you can make for production for sure! If people only knew what it does and all the benefits... Where abouts are you?
@mikeross48 ай бұрын
Good evening from Southern England. We have a system here where local Councils own land which is divided into small areas and rented on an annual basis to residents of the area so that they can grow vegetables and fruit for their own consumption. They are called allotments. We get free deliveries of woodchips, both hardwood and coniferous, from local tree surgeons (arborists) and for the past couple of years I have composted these in plastic compost bins. where and when I can I mix the woodchips with grass or leaves and these speed up the decomposition process. Provided it is kept wet I can make good useable compost to spread on my heavy clay soil in about a year to fifteen months.
@TheMarkhamGardens8 ай бұрын
I think that's great that the ability to have access to a lot to grow your own food is available. Grass and leaves (especially still green) definitely contain more nitrogen so it would only stand to reason that the breakdown of the woodchips would be quickened with the addition of them. There is something so awesome about being able to make your own soil and being more self-sufficient. Kudos to you fellow gardener! 👊😎👍 What is your favorite thing to grow in your garden?
@DifferentWorles8 ай бұрын
This was exactly what i needed to hear. I had some trees cut down back in Aug 2023 and I told the guys just to spread it across my back yard. I didnt know ANYTHING about what I was doing. I just didnt want them to haul it away though. Im a genius!!! 😂..Now I'm planning to plant into it for my fall garden. Im totally new to all of this and super excited. Thank you for sharing this!! Subscribed
@TheMarkhamGardens8 ай бұрын
You are definitely a genius!!! So many have all of that beautiful future soil hauled away so great move on your part! I am so glad the video helped and thank you for subscribing and sharing your experience. What are you planning on planting this fall?
@DifferentWorles8 ай бұрын
@@TheMarkhamGardens I'm thinking of doing rutabaga, beets, collards, squash, and sweet potatoes so far. I'm still learning what crops grow well in what season. I don't know if you've covered this topic already. I came across your channel today looking for an answer about the wood chips. Now that I see how your wood chips are spread out, I'm thinking I can use it to grow some grass and stop erosion. I have areas of nothing but rocky red clay in my yard. I think the wood chips will help me play the long game in cultivating a beautiful lawn.
@thefishfin-atic71068 ай бұрын
what I've been doing is digging trenches in between where I want my rows of vegetables to grow. I use the clay I take out of the trenches to pile up the plot, then I fill the trenches with wood chips. By accident, I started adding coffee grounds to the chips (Starbucks freebee) thinking it would make it less hospitable to slugs and rodents. I didn't realize it at the time, but that mixes browns and greens right in between the garden plants, and composts like crazy. I did this in spring, and by mid summer, I could hardly tell where the rows of wood chips were, because lush weeds were growing in them, and the chips had turned to dark black loam. I noticed my plants (garlic) planted closer to those wood chips were much larger and lusher than the ones away from them! This stuff is amazing, and the coffee grounds make all the difference in breaking it down so fast!
@TheMarkhamGardens7 ай бұрын
Organic material is definitly key to garden success!
@teresathomley37032 ай бұрын
Wow friend
@TheMarkhamGardensАй бұрын
Wow indeed!
@teresathomley3703Ай бұрын
@@TheMarkhamGardens Indeed.
@tammyohlsson79669 ай бұрын
Wonderful! I got three loads today. Hubby is not happy! I want more but he says NO. Couch potato and no interest in our land. The struggle is real. Blessings on your journey!
@TheMarkhamGardens9 ай бұрын
Happy for you and your woodchips/future soil. Sorry you don't have a partner in the things you love! That can be tough...Happy Gardening!!!
@eastside04342 ай бұрын
Belly up on the couch again.
@Practicingpreparedness21 күн бұрын
Same issues 😂
@ddouglas36874 ай бұрын
Our local electrical company has been running crews bush hogging and branch/tree removal maintenance along miles and miles of power lines. They're now down my road and happily agreed to drop as many loads of wood chips as they want on my property suspiciously close to my garden! Oh happy day! Loads are already decomposing after an hour sitting in a 7'high x 15' mound. It's hot already! 😂
@TheMarkhamGardens4 ай бұрын
@ddouglas3687 That is awesome!!! Make sure to wear a mask/ respirator when moving the mulch...it will build molds and such fast and that stuff is a powerful neurotoxin.
@swdw9737 ай бұрын
Our county has free wood chip mulch you can pick up starting April of every year. I have 2 ft raised beds. On my 5th year of using the mulch. 3 inches of wood chips turns into about 1/2 inch of black soil. One extra point. If you go to put them on the garden, add some green stuff to them if you don't have chickens or some kind of manure to mix in with it. This will be our first year doing back yard chickens. There will be 4 inches of mulch in the run and in the coop. That will make some amazing compost this fall or next spring. And BTW, most of the mulch here in Colorado is pine. Works perfectly fine if you let it sit over the winter and mulch the garden with it the next spring. I use the Back to Eden method on the beds. Only have to water once every 4 or so days and our humidity is very low. July to August is mostly 90 degree temps with little rainfall. Friends cannot believe how big our plants get. peppers that are supposed to grow 2 ft tall hit 3- 4 ft. I get 10 lbs of San Marzano tomatoes per plant that I limit to about 7 ft of height. And other plants have grown huge with nice production.
@TheMarkhamGardens7 ай бұрын
What county are you in Colorado?
@swdw9737 ай бұрын
@@TheMarkhamGardens Douglas county- Castle Rock.
@TheMarkhamGardens7 ай бұрын
Guessing this is high desert where you are?
@swdw9737 ай бұрын
@@TheMarkhamGardens Sure is. But at 6300 ft I also have a short growing season between frost dates. (May 20- Sep 27)
@rickrhoduscarolefrazier-rh5657 ай бұрын
Are you using the Black Forest Slash/Mulch program? Helped Ruth Ann Steele who got that going, she's sadly passed, and we moved away, but after that horrific fire in 2016? That program was vital. So many dead trees. I'm now in Ohio, got road crew to give me hardwood chips when they cleared roadside easement. I'm going to try & compost it, but have much smaller property now - had 20 acres in Black forest. I've probably got about 10 yards of wood chips, so I'm going to try the Johnson-Su no turn (static) aerobic composting method. They say it takes a year - but they want chips smaller than what I've got, so it may take longer. I'll use some of wood chips on my garden pathways to keep weeds down, and not walk in mud. Right now, I just have a HUGE pile in my back driveway that's gotta get moved - uggh!
@ManOnaMissionAZ6 ай бұрын
Pretty awesome thumbnail on that mulch and why I need it video!
@TheMarkhamGardens6 ай бұрын
I agree...Friend of mine made that for me!
@jaswas774 ай бұрын
Absolutely fantasticly fabulous 👍
@TheMarkhamGardens4 ай бұрын
@@jaswas77 I agree!!!😁
@teresathomley37032 ай бұрын
Great beard!!
@TheMarkhamGardens2 ай бұрын
@@teresathomley3703 Thank you!
@sharonhoffer35999 ай бұрын
Yep wood chips are gold! I have rock hard clay with barely any top soil, here in Australia 🇦🇺 and I was lucky enough to get a big load of wood chips awhile ago. I’ve let the pile sit for a while to compost and cool down, as when you first get it, it will be hot. But now I use it to make garden beds. I just put a pile of it in a row, and make a hole in the pile and plant into that. I add some compost to the bottom of the hole I make, plant the plant, and away it goes. ☺️🌱👍🏼
@TheMarkhamGardens9 ай бұрын
Seems like you have a good system going that works well for you! Most don't know how nutrient dense clay is and even more don't know that adding organic material on its surface is the ultimate answer to unlocking those dense nutrients. Thanks for sharing!
@PachamamaGLORYАй бұрын
I got 2 chip drops in tonopah AZs sonoran desert. It came with 120+ mesquite, 15+ palms, palo verde and i planted moringa and castor bean. It was feet deep in parts and is dissapearing quick but ive greened up my property so much in this last year. I threw my woodchips on the lowest point of ny property where it was flood zoned and im leeching off of it to expand.
@TheMarkhamGardensАй бұрын
@@PachamamaGLORY That is awesome!!!
@dougmarkham191910 ай бұрын
Great practical advise and explanations to help anyone get their soil where it needs to be to become successful gardeners.
@TheMarkhamGardens2 ай бұрын
@@dougmarkham1919 Thank you.
@ManOnaMissionAZ6 ай бұрын
Very awesome
@TheMarkhamGardens6 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@mkandtk5610 ай бұрын
Been using wood chips for several years now. What a difference it makes on your garden. Keep spreading the word brother.
@TheMarkhamGardens10 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@joedukes97608 ай бұрын
Have you tried introducing worms to any of your piles? Done properly they can supercharge the composting of all that material.
@TheMarkhamGardens8 ай бұрын
I actually have not had to introduce worms. They have introduced themselves to the bottoms of the piles! 😁 If you provide the food, they will come.
@richprich9 ай бұрын
We have had a tree services in the area for over a year. We have gotten 22 Xtra giant loads of wood
@TheMarkhamGardens9 ай бұрын
That's great! Any plans for it?
@MsLisa11149 ай бұрын
This is interesting! I never knew about the black soil. Thank you for the information! ❤❤
@TheMarkhamGardens2 ай бұрын
@@MsLisa1114 You are welcome!
@kennethflynn24697 ай бұрын
Looks good, but it seems to break down better when it's 12-18 inches deep instead of giant piles that may take years to break down
@TheMarkhamGardens7 ай бұрын
You are correct...I just obtained so much mulch that I couldn't spread it that thin. 🤷😆 Although, some of the piles started at 6ft tall and are now around 3ft tall.
@timothywood58088 ай бұрын
I love your beard
@TheMarkhamGardens8 ай бұрын
Thank you! I grew it here at The Markham Gardens!!!😆
@yLeprechaun9 ай бұрын
That is a really impressive set of whiskers!
@TheMarkhamGardens2 ай бұрын
@@yLeprechaun Thank you!
@yLeprechaun2 ай бұрын
@@TheMarkhamGardens , Yessir.
@MsLisa11149 ай бұрын
Will pinestraw work too?
@TheMarkhamGardens9 ай бұрын
Yes pinestraw will work also but is more acidic than other mulch so may require application of lime to raise the pH depending where your starting soil pH is.
@MsLisa11149 ай бұрын
@@TheMarkhamGardens ok, I was just wondering. We have alot of pinestraw. 🤣
@sarahburchette84027 ай бұрын
😊
@TheMarkhamGardens2 ай бұрын
Makes me smile too!
@justinrobertsendoftheage7 ай бұрын
thank you brother in Jesus i have also just applied woodchip to the top layer of veg garden. just waiting to see results. its already composting well in the pile that was left here, maybe because uu have alot of rain in UK. whats your email?
@TheMarkhamGardens7 ай бұрын
Awesome! Rain definitely speeds up the process. Our email is TheMarkhamGardens@gmail.com