Use Cardboard Instead of Landscape Fabric + Planting Lisianthus! 🙌🌿🌍 // Garden Answer

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 15. 05. 2024
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Komentáƙe • 753

  • @Nicollettesparkov
    @Nicollettesparkov Pƙed 15 dny +443

    I’ve used this method with much success but the game changer was learning I could go to Sam’s Club and pull “slip sheets” for free- these are the 4x4 plain cardboard sheets that are found between layers of product on the myriad pallets found in the store. I wanted to share this with the GA family! No cutting down boxes and ripping tape off. I fold it in half and pile the cart high!

    • @astorybookfinish5055
      @astorybookfinish5055 Pƙed 15 dny +3

      Excellent!!!

    • @kaitlynmadden4600
      @kaitlynmadden4600 Pƙed 15 dny +5

      In your experience, do they have them in a big stack and ask for them?

    • @FrenchFifi65
      @FrenchFifi65 Pƙed 15 dny +3

      Ahh! Great idea! Thanks for sharing! OMW

    • @lisaawild
      @lisaawild Pƙed 15 dny +8

      Can you get them at Costco, too?

    • @risalangdon9883
      @risalangdon9883 Pƙed 15 dny +9

      Indeed! I worked in warehousing & distribution for a couple of decades. Those slip sheets are fantastic for a number of things!!

  • @sandranason9314
    @sandranason9314 Pƙed 15 dny +175

    Paul & Bethany are work beasts !!!!

    • @ontarioyamon
      @ontarioyamon Pƙed 15 dny +3

      And all of their physical work shows, right?! Nice and trim.

    • @susanturner9023
      @susanturner9023 Pƙed 15 dny +5

      They really are! Truly talented people. We all would love a Paul and Bethany. ❀

    • @vtwlim67
      @vtwlim67 Pƙed 15 dny +3

      Can someone clone them lol love them!!’n

  • @New-Hat-Gardening
    @New-Hat-Gardening Pƙed 15 dny +118

    Who else is sitting here sipping coffee watching Laura plant all these plants? She's a beast in the garden not to mention being a momma. Wow just wow Laura you amaze us!

    • @patsywilliams5570
      @patsywilliams5570 Pƙed 15 dny +3

      Me, in Georgia! Waiting for biscuits to be finished.

    • @New-Hat-Gardening
      @New-Hat-Gardening Pƙed 15 dny +2

      @@patsywilliams5570 now I’m hungry lol 😋

    • @camirichardson7485
      @camirichardson7485 Pƙed 15 dny +2

      I'm doing exactly that, with half a cup left - Laura makes me miss my youth as I just can't jump up and down from the ground like I used to. LOL

    • @estherzaiback7390
      @estherzaiback7390 Pƙed 15 dny +2

      Me, in Orlando, Florida.

    • @New-Hat-Gardening
      @New-Hat-Gardening Pƙed 15 dny

      @@camirichardson7485 same here.1 day gardening=2 days recovery đŸ«¶

  • @jenniferobin7260
    @jenniferobin7260 Pƙed 15 dny +63

    As someone who works at a plant that produces cardboard, using it for flower beds works great but I would never use it with vegetable or edible gardening. The chemicals that are used to produce the cardboard are toxic and not made for consumption. Keep that in mind also if you live on a well system that it eventually makes it's way into your drinking water.

    • @valerieg9494
      @valerieg9494 Pƙed 15 dny +8

      Great advice about the chemicals used in the cardboard! Thanks!

    • @user-lg6ki6ic5f
      @user-lg6ki6ic5f Pƙed 12 dny +4

      This makes me sad. Did not know there were toxic chemicals in cardboard. I used it at the bottom of my raised bed veg garden 😬

    • @JuniperLynn789
      @JuniperLynn789 Pƙed 12 dny +3

      @@user-lg6ki6ic5fI also used them at the bottom of my raised beds. My beds are 17” tall so hopefully the root systems won’t make their way all the way down there.

    • @jessicalatorraca8507
      @jessicalatorraca8507 Pƙed 12 dny +2

      Thanks for that. Might affect wildlife, too. Do you know if brown paper bags are ‘chemicalized’?

    • @jenniferobin7260
      @jenniferobin7260 Pƙed 12 dny +2

      @@jessicalatorraca8507 Yes they are

  • @nancyzimmerman1982
    @nancyzimmerman1982 Pƙed 15 dny +108

    Have used cardboard and newspaper for years. Highly recommend it to anyone.

    • @budoneof15
      @budoneof15 Pƙed 15 dny +2

      Is newspaper as effective?

    • @pathoward5721
      @pathoward5721 Pƙed 15 dny +5

      Yes 👍

    • @anitanvrk358
      @anitanvrk358 Pƙed 15 dny

      I want to do this but don’t slugs gather under the cardboard then eat the seedlings?

    • @Terry-lh8cn
      @Terry-lh8cn Pƙed 15 dny +1

      ​@@anitanvrk358I've never had that problem. They would have to get through the layers of cardboard and mulch first.

    • @theoneandonly1158
      @theoneandonly1158 Pƙed 15 dny

      ​@@anitanvrk358 rolly pollies love tender seedlings too eat.

  • @virginiamathews1541
    @virginiamathews1541 Pƙed 15 dny +114

    I’m on a 1/3 acre that’s a blank slate and I’ve done the cardboard method! I think it’s easy and is instant gratification to our space. 10-10 recommend!đŸ™ŒđŸŒ

    • @snickerspayne4929
      @snickerspayne4929 Pƙed 12 dny +1

      Question if you will, When are you able to start planting flowers after putting down cardboard?

    • @virginiamathews1541
      @virginiamathews1541 Pƙed 11 dny +1

      @@snickerspayne4929 I’ve planted right away and I’ve waited about a month I just cut out the cardboard where I wanted to plant. I hope that helpsâ˜ș

  • @angelaengler2387
    @angelaengler2387 Pƙed 15 dny +91

    I’ve been gardening for 35 years, I wish I had known about using cardboard and compost to make new beds years ago! I used to double dig to work in soil amendments, sometimes using a rotor tiller. Before doing that I’d have to remove the sod! It was SO MUCH work! I love this no dig method!

    • @heatherwoods5703
      @heatherwoods5703 Pƙed 15 dny +6

      Martha Stewart was my patron Saint in the '90s, and I remember her demonstrating the double-dig method. That lady never used shortcuts! đŸ€Ș

    • @user-ec1ry2vg4l
      @user-ec1ry2vg4l Pƙed 15 dny +1

      I always remove sod and dig...yes its hard but my space is small compared to GA - so each year I do a section attached time â€đŸŽ‰đŸ˜Š

    • @gr8gardn
      @gr8gardn Pƙed 15 dny +6

      The problem with removing sod (other than the time and labor) is the vegetation, top soil and roots are all removed, leaving only subsoil. By leaving the sod intact and covering with cardboard & mulch, you pretty much have good soil with valuable nutrients below that is ready to plant in someday, if you like.

    • @malina1239
      @malina1239 Pƙed 15 dny

      QUESTION
      Why does the print and color on the cardboard matter, when used in a bed where you don’t grow food?
      I get that you wouldn’t want potential chemical dye in the soil for growing vegetables .
      For for flowers and trees I wouldn’t think it mattered very much, unless one is very environmental conscious .
      Many people do spray anyway, I’s the printed cardboard worse than weed killers ?

    • @gr8gardn
      @gr8gardn Pƙed 15 dny +4

      @@malina1239 online resources say that colored ink on cardboard, newpaper & other papers, may contain some toxic heavy metals. Even if food isn't being grown, these toxins can eventually find their way into our water. On the other hand, most American & European boxes are printed with non-toxic inks unless they are shiny. I don't remove tape or labels because they seem to work their way up to the surface where it is easy to pull it off.

  • @elizabethbrooks3462
    @elizabethbrooks3462 Pƙed 15 dny +35

    Loved and used this method since finding Charles Dowding on CZcams 10 years ago! The worms GO CRAZY for cardboard😍

    • @BarbsintheGarden
      @BarbsintheGarden Pƙed 13 dny +1

      Yes! I was hoping someone would mention UK's Charles! He goes into why you do better not disturbing your soil structure. I thought I was just being lazy ( not wanting to cut sod) but it's actually the best for your soil's health. He doesn't even wait for cardboard to break down to plant. Just plants right in the thick layer of compost.

  • @Krista-marieT
    @Krista-marieT Pƙed 15 dny +54

    Your neighbors really lucked out with you as a neighbor

  • @dwohio8283
    @dwohio8283 Pƙed 15 dny +46

    I often put down cardboard, leftover straw from Halloween, shredded leaves and then compost to fill new raised beds. It's worked beautifully for me.

  • @Katsimagination21
    @Katsimagination21 Pƙed 15 dny +44

    Laura, the cardboard method is a game changer 😊 I’ve also used brown paper grocery bags 2 to 3 layered on top of each other ,especially in my raised beds and it works beautifully , the paper bags break down by summers end ! 😊

  • @shaniaa9287
    @shaniaa9287 Pƙed 15 dny +16

    You work so hard Laura. There should be a holiday for your efforts and to praise all hard working gardeners creating their color spots of beauty for our pollinators ❀❀❀

    • @GoingGreenMom
      @GoingGreenMom Pƙed 15 dny

      Lol, Well there is International Naked Gardening Day to celebrate gardeners. 😂

  • @lulugirl7043
    @lulugirl7043 Pƙed 15 dny +12

    Sometimes do you just stand with your mouth hanging open in amazement of all Y’all have done !!! It’s incredible !!!🎉🎉

  • @nashnash7997
    @nashnash7997 Pƙed 15 dny +21

    I started marigolds inside and this is the first time my seedlings were strong. Our walkway is lined with marigolds and all but 1 survived. So proud of myself. I cant wait til next year now lol

  • @kathrynriggs2489
    @kathrynriggs2489 Pƙed 15 dny +56

    As a Girl Scout leader of many years, if you are looking for free cardboard contact a local Girl Scout troop between January and March. They may be willing to save empty cases for you. My troop personally dumps tons of them. You can also reach out to local counsels to help you find one.

  • @leithawalling9519
    @leithawalling9519 Pƙed 14 dny +5

    Douglas is back. Also thank you for supporting cardboard use. My neighbors think I’m weird.

  • @karmaisbad6672
    @karmaisbad6672 Pƙed 15 dny +3

    DOES NOT WORK WITH THE DEVILS GRASS - AKA BERMUDA GRASS - but I"m glad it works well for you in your area!

  • @lisacapriglione4920
    @lisacapriglione4920 Pƙed 15 dny +20

    I have used this method for years and years as I have 100s of acreas of different gardens. It's the best

  • @MK-ti2oo
    @MK-ti2oo Pƙed 15 dny +31

    I'm just here to say that this is the first gardening video I found my husband watching over my shoulder at the start, he then proceeded to tell me how WE need THAT! I was so excited he finally sees gardening as the great thing it is....... Then he says 'with THAT dozer I'd be doing all kinds of cool stuff! But I could also use that 5 car garage, you know to store the dozer in!' 😐

  • @user-ji1mz7jl8h
    @user-ji1mz7jl8h Pƙed 15 dny +33

    I live vicariously through y’all for the start of a lovely sunny gardening season 😆I’m in Scotland and we take a little longer to get going 🙄(wouldn’t be anywhere else though). You keep my spirits up for a sunny Summer đŸŽ‰đŸ˜‚â€

  • @cynthiabroockman1752
    @cynthiabroockman1752 Pƙed 15 dny +23

    Charles Dowding a market gardener in the UK I think really is responsible for promoting this method n making it now so popular. His gardens are beautiful n so productive. Check him out! He has written many books as well. Nice man, so knowledgeable.

  • @phyllisbechtel7141
    @phyllisbechtel7141 Pƙed 15 dny +26

    I have done this for years, newspaper and paper grocery bags also work great. This is nothing new been using this for years, I actually have cardboard on my walking paths as I type waiting to have rock placed!
    I have been gardening for 40 years and this is a common method to use in Illinois. Have a great day everyone.

  • @MicheleLHarvey
    @MicheleLHarvey Pƙed 15 dny +39

    Cardboard IS the gardener's friend! (Especially when dealing with noxious weeds like Bishop's weed!)
    It doesn't eradicate it (nothing does,) but it does knock it down enough to make it doable. I only wish I'd known about using cardboard 30 years ago! Looks beautiful!

    • @barbll000
      @barbll000 Pƙed 15 dny +1

      Worms love decomposing cardboard - after all it was a wood tree once upon a time.

  • @EdensApple80
    @EdensApple80 Pƙed 15 dny +22

    I love using cardboard to create gardens- it brings in the worms đŸȘ± too! ❀ Plus saves sore knees and ankles with arthritis

  • @gardeningwithmamabird
    @gardeningwithmamabird Pƙed 15 dny +6

    I did the cardboard process a year ago to extend my flower beds in my small track home yard, and it turned out fantastic! You are right when you shared how much labor it saves. Fun to see it done on a larger scale!

  • @yvettemills7824
    @yvettemills7824 Pƙed 15 dny +7

    I reclaimed a chunk on our property this winter/spring with this method and now it is our flower cutting garden! The seeds and seedlings are thriving and the only weed that is coming through is bindweed and as we all know, not much is going to suppress that so were managing that manually as it pops up. Bonus when we ordered a new mattress and they left the box. Then I asked what other boxes they had in that delivery truck and they gave me a truckload!

  • @manishaholm
    @manishaholm Pƙed 15 dny +4

    So happy that you're showing this method of using cardboard to block weeds. It works GREAT! Love all your videos with your cheerful enthusiasm and knack for accomplishing huge projects easily. You make anything possible.

  • @LifeStirredUp
    @LifeStirredUp Pƙed 15 dny +2

    The cardboard method helps me so much. At 61 year old, it saves my back! The earthworms love it too!

  • @Ladybugsandflowers
    @Ladybugsandflowers Pƙed 15 dny +9

    I absolutely LOVE doing the cardboard method. I learned about it a few years ago, and since then it is the only way I make a new bed. Not only does it suppress grass and weeds, it holds moisture and attracts worms. My horrible clay soil (so bad you could make pottery out of it), actually improves in the cardboard and compost areas. I have one new bed that I just put it two weeks ago, and it looks great, and I am hoping to get another one cardboard and composted in the next few days. It was so wonderful to see that you use the same method in your gorgeous gardens. Thank you for showing us.

  • @lisaenglish4770
    @lisaenglish4770 Pƙed 7 dny +1

    I have a Douglas kitty too!! Everyone that meets him thinks his name is so funny, glad to meet another one from the rare Douglas kitty tribe LOL. His full name is Douglas Lamar English lol. I got sidetracked, happens easily!
    Back to your video...thank you for showing us how you did your cardboard. As you said, there are many others saying it works but seeing the lawn vs. woodchips vs. cardboard is really helpful for deciding which route I want to go. 😊

  • @shellyroman1321
    @shellyroman1321 Pƙed 15 dny +28

    I love the cardboard method. Since you first featured this in your videos, I have used it many times with great success around my yard and garden. I also put cardboard down around my vine crops to suppress the weeds and it works great! I work at a flower shop so I have access to nice large, heavy cardboard boxes that flowers are delivered in. I highly recommend this method.

  • @saralupo9535
    @saralupo9535 Pƙed 15 dny +25

    Laura, you and Aaron are what this country is really all about. I love when I see where you and Aaron are now I I think about Aaron saying how he had to sell his lap top to buy the house. So many sacrifices for where you are today once again I love your hard working attitude. I wish I had half.

  • @cynthiag3065
    @cynthiag3065 Pƙed 15 dny +4

    I don’t know how I missed this cardboard trick to creating a flower bed. Thank you for GA and GA friends for sharing.😊

  • @daymoonfarm2903
    @daymoonfarm2903 Pƙed 15 dny +4

    I LOVE the music today!!!

  • @dianegoldberg1003
    @dianegoldberg1003 Pƙed 15 dny +12

    Many years ago when we built our home; I used to get a gardening magazine called Garden Gate and that’s where I got this idea. You can also use 5 sheets of newspaper paper black and white ink only. It kills the grass and makes great nitro humus for the plants. Works amazing.

  • @holly_kay5570
    @holly_kay5570 Pƙed 15 dny +8

    Great to show this! I use 12 layers of newspaper overlapped, wet down and then covered with fine mulch in old flower beds. I have purchased rolls of newsprint for this. Also brown paper bags work well. Cardboard works best for grassy areas, but I do soak it down and sometimes put some landscape staples in it, then put fine mulch on top. I like to keep it wet for a couple of weeks because if it dries out a big windstorm can shift it around.

  • @juliafiore120
    @juliafiore120 Pƙed 15 dny +10

    Good morning, Laura ☕I used the cardboard last year and it worked well! So much easier than pulling up the grass. That border is gorgeous! Paul & Bethany are amazing workers!đŸ‘đŸ»đŸ‘đŸ»đŸ‘đŸ» The cut flower garden is filling up nicely!😍Have a Blessed Day 😊🐈🐈

  • @valerieiverson2633
    @valerieiverson2633 Pƙed 15 dny +6

    No questions today...just a thank you. You're truly an inspiration and an encouragement. I have been wanting to do this and I'm currently saving cardboard, but haven't done it yet as I too have been skeptical. You showing this gives me the push to just go for it!
    Thank you!

  • @tammydeschenes4857
    @tammydeschenes4857 Pƙed 15 dny +2

    Love watching Laura work. Her method is so efficient, organized and time saving. My kind of style. I sometimes get frustrated watching other gardeners who don’t have this skill and seem to waste so much time and work so unorganized. Must be the type A in me that gets triggered. 😆 But Laura, I could watch all day. ❀

  • @gretchenburton7184
    @gretchenburton7184 Pƙed 15 dny +3

    Thank you, Laura and team. Every moment is instructional. I love to start every morning watching GA and reruns on most Saturdays. Thank you to your entire family❀

  • @helenpugh709
    @helenpugh709 Pƙed 12 dny

    I did this last weekend to expand one of my borders. My husband was watching me with suspicion, but only after a week, it looks great. My back is also thanking me, it was so much easier than digging up the turf

  • @kathy8832
    @kathy8832 Pƙed 15 dny +5

    Good morning! The area that was just mulched over the grass look so nice. Such an easy way to kill off a large amount of grass and make it look fresh and clean too!

  • @AHomesteadingHustle
    @AHomesteadingHustle Pƙed 15 dny +4

    Yes the cardboard method works well for sure! Reminder to people to not use the ones with the heavy labeling on them. Example: diaper boxes
    Breaking down the boxes is a good project for kids to be involved in!

  • @lynns4426
    @lynns4426 Pƙed dnem

    I've done this for raised beds. It worked really well.

  • @MelSchmidt7
    @MelSchmidt7 Pƙed 15 dny +1

    I really admire your beautiful gardens, and I'm so jealous at the wonderful variety you have. I have soooooo much trouble here with deer and groundhogs that my choices are limited if I don't want to do all that work just to provide them with breakfast, lunch, and supper. Sigh. Either way, you inspire to get out there and get 'er done!!

  • @jbrittenham
    @jbrittenham Pƙed 13 dny

    You guys are making good use of that new bobcat!

  • @user-jw1ot1ex9w
    @user-jw1ot1ex9w Pƙed 6 dny

    as someone who see newspaper to cut down on weeds
much cheaper than landscape fabric
this looks great!

  • @gardenmore
    @gardenmore Pƙed 15 dny +15

    We use grocery paper! It’s much thinner but we save up when we make groceries. We do not use it on this kind of a scale. We layer it just the same and we don’t worry about tape or staples or print since they are typically plain brown paper.

  • @ladikmk
    @ladikmk Pƙed 13 dny

    The cardboard method works very well. I've used this many times, but only for flowerbeds - not in the vegetable beds. Lisianthus is the flower I buy in Winter at the grocery to perk me up. It lasts forever in a vase.

  • @camicri4263
    @camicri4263 Pƙed 15 dny +5

    Good morning everyone! It looks so good! The cardboard under mulch is the best! Blessings đŸ™đŸ»đŸ’ž

  • @debvalle7466
    @debvalle7466 Pƙed 12 dny

    Cardboard is where it’s at! I’ve had great success with it and zero success with landscape fabric. I feel like fabric encourages growth by trapping heat. I will be using a small flame thrower (for real!) to get at the truly stubborn weeds under the brick portions of my yard. Also have found that comfrey teas and chop ‘n drop nettle teas make excellent fertilizers. I really don’t trust anything from the stores; even those that bill themselves as organic.
    Basically, all things permaculture have thus far worked well for me.
    I just received my first Black Pearl Lisianthus seeds and am super excited. They’re so pretty and unusual. It’ll be great seeing how your big collection of them turns out. Best of luck!

  • @pattidavis8043
    @pattidavis8043 Pƙed 8 dny

    So excited getting this party started

  • @oz6123
    @oz6123 Pƙed 11 dny

    In the days when newspaper subscriptions was still a thing, I used newspapers and print flyers stacked 10 pages thick instead of landscape fabric. Did the job better than any fabric at zero cost.

  • @christinawyckoff2164
    @christinawyckoff2164 Pƙed 15 dny +1

    Seen you doing it before the cardboard box and mulch perfect for me love it 💞

  • @nikkisigmon8090
    @nikkisigmon8090 Pƙed 15 dny +7

    Moved into our first house, no landscaping on the property. Used cardboard and layed 6-8" of chopped leaves from a trash pile, gathered up old woodchips and lawn clippings.
    Didnt have a truck, so I lined my Jetta's trunk with a tarp and hailed load after load 😂 it worked great!
    Had a few cases where wiregrass came through where it was thin, and you'll still have to take a little hand hoe to strip out the violets that grow through but it's SO much easier! Highly recommend. Plant it up densely so you dont have to weed it except once in a rare while. The insect life and variety exploded :D

  • @kathyabel5338
    @kathyabel5338 Pƙed 11 dny

    Works so well. We've done this for years.

  • @melissamele1305
    @melissamele1305 Pƙed 12 dny

    We used just topsoil over the grass, then mulch. And no grass ever came up. But this method looks BRILLIANT!

  • @jolindarather5180
    @jolindarather5180 Pƙed 15 dny +5

    The cardboard method, game changer! Used it several times over the last couple of years to create flower beds and currently a bed around a new patio. I make sure minimal print on cardboard and as you said remove tape. I layered it with compost, soil conditioner and mulch. The bed I’ve had the longest contains Hibiscus, A climbing rose bush and several other perennials and is doing fantastic.
    Lisianthus! I tried several attempts at starting from seedlings in January (inside of course). Out of 24 ended up with one! Slowest growing plant I have ever encountered. Patience is a Virtue I was not gifted with! The one however is looking fantastic since being potted outside about 2 months ago. Cannot wait to see it bloom. I will probably try again next year and now know what to expect.

  • @user-rk3ld3nu6v
    @user-rk3ld3nu6v Pƙed 15 dny +3

    I was always team “sod removal “, the last flower bed I created I did the cardboard method. So far, full success!

  • @theheritagehousesc
    @theheritagehousesc Pƙed 15 dny +2

    I learned the cardboard method years ago from Eden garden. You can always add more on top later as it decomposes and add more mulch on top. The sod adds nitrogen back into the soil as it decomposes too. Love this method. Kudos to Paul and Bethany Bethany for their hard work!

  • @cnorovich48
    @cnorovich48 Pƙed 15 dny +8

    I’ve used the cardboard method several times with great success
another thrifty and effective route is newspaper for smaller areas. Again, no glossy or highly inked/colorful supplements, (just black & white newsprint) works great with about a 5-6 layer thickness. Of course wind is a factor with newspaper, but I wet it down right away which helps. Both the cardboard and newspaper methods are eco friendly, budget friendly and effective! Thanks for spreading the word Laura.

  • @angelas4681
    @angelas4681 Pƙed 15 dny +1

    I love, love, LOVE the cardboard & mulch method.

  • @dianemcgee2381
    @dianemcgee2381 Pƙed 14 dny

    You’re both so amazing. I have to go take a nap cause your hard work made me tired.

  • @steelgy
    @steelgy Pƙed 10 dny

    We did this and the grass comes through in short order, stronger than ever.

  • @vtwlim67
    @vtwlim67 Pƙed 15 dny +2

    Awwww Douglas ❀❀❀❀❀

  • @chines68
    @chines68 Pƙed 11 dny +1

    I use cardboard and top with grass clippings in areas where no one sees it. Very economical way to suppress weeds with very little labor. I do this myself and I'm in my 70s. Again, you have to be careful using grass clippings in food growing areas if you use herbicides or pesticides on your lawn area.

  • @kkmomma09
    @kkmomma09 Pƙed 15 dny +2

    I have always hated fabric. I will definitely use this!

  • @BuffysFlavorfulJourney
    @BuffysFlavorfulJourney Pƙed 15 dny +2

    I love using cardboard in my garden. It cuts down on weeds, tremendously, and worms love it once it has broken down. So when I shut the garden down for the winter (Zone 6a), I lay the cardboard down and cover with straw/hay, which also breaks down and feeds the soil. Although, I noticed this past winter that since our temperatures did not get too cold, some of the cardboard did not break down, which I took up and put into my compost bin. And these were only small pieces, like may seven total. All the Best to You!

  • @scotiasweetie1647
    @scotiasweetie1647 Pƙed 14 dny

    Yes! Any and every alternative to using plastic that leeches into our soil and ground water the better. Thanks for showing the process.

  • @ggfarmgirl8350
    @ggfarmgirl8350 Pƙed 15 dny +2

    This is a great method for building new beds, if you don’t have Bermuda. Nothing keeps that stuff from growing back short of strong chemicals! It will even grow across concrete

  • @LikeUwhereThere
    @LikeUwhereThere Pƙed 15 dny

    I always love ur choice in music. Ur vids are so nice to watch. Thank u to ur whole crew!

  • @michelesimpson2237
    @michelesimpson2237 Pƙed 15 dny +6

    I sheet mulched my entire back yard. It’s a good way to go.

  • @dindyuhl2727
    @dindyuhl2727 Pƙed 15 dny +3

    I have done this and all I gotta say is it is THE WAY to go to rid grass.

  • @kathyglover2402
    @kathyglover2402 Pƙed 13 dny

    Great tip with cardboard on grass. Thank you for sharing.l learn something new with every video. Thank you for sharing it all.

  • @CarolBain-fb5sx
    @CarolBain-fb5sx Pƙed 15 dny

    I used this method in small areas and covered the cardboard with rocks! Works like a dream!. Just two or three weeds and these easily pop right out. Thank you!.

  • @louinwy1
    @louinwy1 Pƙed 6 dny

    You need to talk about how beneficial this is to your soil. 1. You don’t disturb the microorganisms in the existing soil. 2. The cardboard breaks down into more compost. 3. The worms come up and take the compost down into your existing soil. Especially beneficial when you have hard packed, clay soil. It turns into crumbly loamy soil eventually.

  • @mindyrutkowski3124
    @mindyrutkowski3124 Pƙed 12 dny

    I have used this method and it works great!! Only suggestion is to make sure to remove any staples in the cardboard you don’t want to hit one of those digging.

  • @rosewolfe9606
    @rosewolfe9606 Pƙed 15 dny +5

    In South Carolina, I remove the sod, put my chicken run compost full of weed seeds over the rock hard clay, then cardboard, then arborist woodchips. And it's still a fight to keep the Bermuda, crabgrass, and centipede down. In a couple of years it's beautiful to plant in though! I'm super glad this method works for some! So much easier.

  • @praisingirl
    @praisingirl Pƙed 15 dny +3

    Douglas took the plant label!😊

  • @SofiNme365
    @SofiNme365 Pƙed 7 dny

    Your hair looks beautiful!

  • @patsyden6276
    @patsyden6276 Pƙed 14 dny

    Have started to create a new flower bed. And this is my method because of the first video you showed. Thank you for sharing these great ideas.

  • @serresaschrock2359
    @serresaschrock2359 Pƙed 15 dny +1

    My husband works at a garage door place and I get my cardboard from there. No tape and it's 2 foot wide by 12 foot long. It's free and no tape or print. The only thing it's thinner but I can work with it.

  • @AmbersAquariums
    @AmbersAquariums Pƙed 15 dny +1

    I've been using cardboard for years. Works great! We use it in our garden after our first till. We plant, add the cardboard down the rows, and then add some straw. Game changer for us! There are a few weeds around the plants, but it saves us from tilling. By spring of next year, it's all broken down. Our soil remains great. Love this method! ❀ Love your channel!

  • @olive8822
    @olive8822 Pƙed 15 dny

    There are a lot of properties on slopes. They look terraced sometimes and you could add stairs, perhaps plant spreading evergreens.

  • @sharonyost3807
    @sharonyost3807 Pƙed 15 dny +1

    Will definitely try this
    Did the milk jugs for seedling starts worked great

  • @lyonhawaii
    @lyonhawaii Pƙed 15 dny +2

    Yes! I needed this! I have been saving cardboard for this reason! Thank you!

  • @rlgillette
    @rlgillette Pƙed 14 dny

    I used it for years but when I moved to the coast of Washington, we have so much rain, it only lasted on summer and they totally decomposed and the grass was all back before end of the year. So I tried old carpet, which lasted two years and this year the grass has come through it. No stopping grass or blackberries around this country I don't think.. I"ve given up. Now I just plant shrubs and mow up under them the best I can.

  • @rebeccaposkey8026
    @rebeccaposkey8026 Pƙed 14 dny

    I use this cardboard all the time and have for years now. So easy❀

  • @lornamcallister4475
    @lornamcallister4475 Pƙed 15 dny +8

    I have a lot of elevation in my property. I tried this on a 20 degree slope but my landscape folks asked me to remove it because the sweet peat would not stay in place with it. So, if you have level land it works great but not so well on hills. I am glad that it is working so well for you!

    • @yesterdayseyes
      @yesterdayseyes Pƙed 15 dny +1

      You can buy mulch for hills that is longer and kinda interlocks with it's self, not the best to plant in though.

    • @gr8gardn
      @gr8gardn Pƙed 15 dny +3

      I use doubled paper grocery bags that have been soaked in water for few minutes in a 5 gallon bucket to “paper” a steep slope then top with a thick layer of pine needles. Wetting the bags some makes them easier to place and they stay put long enough to get the pine needles on. Pine needles seem to mat themselves together and do not wash down the slope or blow away. I hate working on the slope but it’s worse to have to be on it more than once a year to weed and shovel other mulches that wash down back up to the top đŸ€Ź

  • @mneraasen224
    @mneraasen224 Pƙed 15 dny +1

    I love the cardboard method. I put it under my woven weed fabric because of Bermuda grass. I did leave the bottom of my raised beds with just cardboard. Some of it will try to come up. Keep digging it it
    Out. And pull all tint weeds. It’s a pain but I have beds that have no grass. My favorite mulch is shredded leaves for raised beds or shaved wood chips for garlic and strawberries. Or shredded hardwood.

  • @user-ii1xf9bn6c
    @user-ii1xf9bn6c Pƙed 11 dny

    Love the music selection.

  • @charlesprice925
    @charlesprice925 Pƙed 15 dny +2

    A hint about removing sod in a suburban area. The best top soil may have come with the sod, or developed with it. If the original top soil was graded off when the house was built. After I removed the sod for garden beds, when i move in, I found, not very fertile, subsoil. A local said the area was hilly farm land that had been graded flat for the subdivision build, leaving only subsoil. It's taken years to build the soil back up in those areas I stripped. I'd done better to have turned the sod over and helped it decompose. The areas I carboarded over, later, have done very well.

  • @beverlyasleson3321
    @beverlyasleson3321 Pƙed 15 dny +1

    Love the cardboard mulch method I’ve seen you do it before super idea I should have done that in my little patch of flower bed my gardener charged me $200 to do it and I still had to put down the mulch after I planted flowers and I was 71 years old with back/ neck pain. đŸ’Ș

  • @sandragolightly5844
    @sandragolightly5844 Pƙed 14 dny

    We used cardboard and black mulch on flowerbeds where we are not planting anything. It looks so nice and clean.

  • @laurieh9388
    @laurieh9388 Pƙed dnem

    You plant with flipflops on. Lol. Your Lisianthus look great! Did you use your grow lights/greenhouse to keep them so nice? Thanks for your inspiration. Might give them a try next season.

  • @Schnueggl
    @Schnueggl Pƙed 15 dny +1

    I also did this last year and I see a massive different in the soil now. On the cardboard side (which is broken down of course) the soil is full of live, so many worms and holds moisture very well. Right next to it I have an area where I ripped out the weeds and the soil is much poorer, very light in colour, no rainworms, etc. I will always use cardboard again! So much easier than keeping up with the weeds as well.

  • @peggyscott2180
    @peggyscott2180 Pƙed 15 dny +4

    I used cardboard to create a traveled area around our side door, BUT, I put landscape over it to make sure I don't see a weed!

  • @cketts8128
    @cketts8128 Pƙed 15 dny +1

    Here in the U.K., my daughter used this technique on her allotment to clear weeds and make new beds and start growing fruit and veg. It’s brilliant! 🧡💚

  • @GardenHappy
    @GardenHappy Pƙed 14 dny

    This cardboard idea is becoming SO POPULAR!!! Thanks for showing us how its done. đŸ„°đŸ„°đŸ˜ƒ Liz from California

  • @Denise_B17
    @Denise_B17 Pƙed 11 dny

    Laura we used landscape fabric two years in a row. The following year's I was planting new things. I hated when trying to pull weeds etc and getting the fabric. Someone where I live mentioned the cardboard method. It works and you don't have to worry about trying to get up the fabric. I stopped using landscaping fabric 9 years ago. We recently moved with a bigger back yard. I have ordered different things online. I saved the cardboard boxes and removed any tape. We went to the liquor store that had free boxes. We took the tape off and have them in one of our sheds. We used some of the cardboard for plants I had at the last place. So we planted those using the cardboard method. I love how it looks. It looks amazing! We did water our down as we had some gusty winds a few weeks ago. I am sticking with the cardboard method forever. I love how your area looks. I signed up for the wood chips program but never got an email or call. We don't want to use wood chips too close to the house as it can attract carpenter ants. So we used it (we bought) far away from our home. I am going to try and get the wood chips this year. But we shall see.