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Old 17-11-2008, 02:32 PM posted to rec.gardens
Dioclese Dioclese is offline
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First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Oct 2007
Posts: 498
Default Autumn leaves as mulch?

"Wilson" wrote in message
...
sometime in the recent past Dioclese posted this:
"Newbie" wrote in message
...
As a new gardener in soon-to-freeze Midwest, I have noticed the
following irony: We as well as our neighbors are raking bags upon bags
of autumn leaves from the front and back yards and discarding them. At
the same time we are buying mulch to protect newly planted perennials
during the winter.

An obvious question is, could we use those leaves as mulch? I get
enough to make as thick a layer as needed?


So far that I read in the responses visible to this news reader, only
David E. Ross used the term mulch properly in among all their responses.
Others were referring to compost, not mulch. They, or at least one of
them, should have started a new thread if they wanted to talk about
leaves used in compost.

Compost -
–noun
1. a mixture of various decaying organic substances, as dead leaves or
manure, used for fertilizing soil.
2. a composition; compound.
–verb (used with object)
3. to use in compost; make compost of: to compost manure and kitchen
scraps.
4. to apply compost to (soil).
–verb (used without object)
5. to make compost: Shredded leaves will compost easily.


Take your pick, but it's not always a verb.

--
Wilson N44º39" W67º12"


I see all the discusssion with one exception going to composting. Guess
Sheldon forgot what mulch was... And to police those that do not use
"mulch" in its strictest context here. Flaky is, as flaky does.
--
Dave

If it looks like fish, smells like fish, its not
a cantaloupe.