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ag.richards 01-08-2015 11:44 AM

Stone Garden
 
Hi going to put some all year round plants in this year,just covered my
garden with stone and a membrane
but underneath there used to be a lawn not a very nice one full weeds and
stuff,just want to know the best way to go
about this does the soil underneath need treating or can I plant straight
away any advice most welcome what sort of
plants etc,Thx in advance T.R.

Stephen Wolstenholme[_5_] 01-08-2015 02:45 PM

Stone Garden
 
On Sat, 1 Aug 2015 11:44:11 +0100, "ag.richards"
wrote:

Hi going to put some all year round plants in this year,just covered my
garden with stone and a membrane
but underneath there used to be a lawn not a very nice one full weeds and
stuff,just want to know the best way to go
about this does the soil underneath need treating or can I plant straight
away any advice most welcome what sort of
plants etc,Thx in advance T.R.


Do you mean that you want to plant through holes in the membrane? I
did the same thing with stone flags in a previous property but with no
membrane. There were no problems with the flagged over lawn growing
through the gaps.

Steve

--
Neural Network Software for Windows http://www.npsnn.com

EasyNN-plus More than just a neural network http://www.easynn.com



Pam Moore[_3_] 01-08-2015 03:47 PM

Stone Garden
 
On Sat, 1 Aug 2015 11:44:11 +0100, "ag.richards"
wrote:

Hi going to put some all year round plants in this year,just covered my
garden with stone and a membrane
but underneath there used to be a lawn not a very nice one full weeds and
stuff,just want to know the best way to go
about this does the soil underneath need treating or can I plant straight
away any advice most welcome what sort of
plants etc,Thx in advance T.R.


Not sure what you mean by "stone". Do you mean paving slabs, gravel or
something in between? If you have a membrane you presumably mean
gravel of some sort.
The best thing to do would have been to use Glyphosate on the weedy
lawn before putting down the membrane. You need to leave it all
covered to give time for the stuff underneath to die off in the dark,
ideally waiting long enough (?) before you plant through the membrane.
There will be weeds that get through anyway from seeds in the soil.
You will just have to be vigilant.


Janet 01-08-2015 05:16 PM

Stone Garden
 
In article ,
says...

On Sat, 1 Aug 2015 11:44:11 +0100, "ag.richards"
wrote:

Hi going to put some all year round plants in this year,just covered my
garden with stone and a membrane
but underneath there used to be a lawn not a very nice one full weeds and
stuff,just want to know the best way to go
about this does the soil underneath need treating or can I plant straight
away any advice most welcome what sort of
plants etc,Thx in advance T.R.


Not sure what you mean by "stone". Do you mean paving slabs, gravel or
something in between? If you have a membrane you presumably mean
gravel of some sort.
The best thing to do would have been to use Glyphosate on the weedy
lawn before putting down the membrane. You need to leave it all
covered to give time for the stuff underneath to die off in the dark,


On the contrary, when you use glyphosate, you want the plant to
survive long enough to translocate the poison to its roots. Covering it
would interfere with the process.

If you're using a membrane covered in either gravel or slabs, on a
weedy lawn, there's no need to weedkill first; total lack of light will
do that(and also, prevent any weed seeds in the soil from germinating.
You can make doubly sure by covering the lawn with cardboard, then
membrane, then the stone. (I've done this; instant gravelled area on
what was lawn until that morning.)

ideally waiting long enough (?) before you plant through the membrane.
There will be weeds that get through anyway from seeds in the soil.


No, there won't. It will be far too dark and newly germinated
seedlings don't have the strength to penetrate membrane let alone stone
topping it.

Janet.

David Hill 01-08-2015 11:43 PM

Stone Garden
 
On 01/08/2015 17:16, Janet wrote:
In article ,
says...

On Sat, 1 Aug 2015 11:44:11 +0100, "ag.richards"
wrote:

Hi going to put some all year round plants in this year,just covered my
garden with stone and a membrane
but underneath there used to be a lawn not a very nice one full weeds and
stuff,just want to know the best way to go
about this does the soil underneath need treating or can I plant straight
away any advice most welcome what sort of
plants etc,Thx in advance T.R.


Not sure what you mean by "stone". Do you mean paving slabs, gravel or
something in between? If you have a membrane you presumably mean
gravel of some sort.
The best thing to do would have been to use Glyphosate on the weedy
lawn before putting down the membrane. You need to leave it all
covered to give time for the stuff underneath to die off in the dark,


On the contrary, when you use glyphosate, you want the plant to
survive long enough to translocate the poison to its roots. Covering it
would interfere with the process.

If you're using a membrane covered in either gravel or slabs, on a
weedy lawn, there's no need to weedkill first; total lack of light will
do that(and also, prevent any weed seeds in the soil from germinating.
You can make doubly sure by covering the lawn with cardboard, then
membrane, then the stone. (I've done this; instant gravelled area on
what was lawn until that morning.)

ideally waiting long enough (?) before you plant through the membrane.
There will be weeds that get through anyway from seeds in the soil.


No, there won't. It will be far too dark and newly germinated
seedlings don't have the strength to penetrate membrane let alone stone
topping it.

Janet.



You should have thought about this before you put down the membrane and
gravel.
From what you have said there is no knowing the state of the soil under
the covering other than it was lawn, Was it compacted? did it have
perennial weeds?
when you cut through to plant you will disturb the soil and will expose
some weed seeds that will naturally germinate so some weeding will be
needed in time.
If the soil is badly compacted then it is going to require breaking up
before planting, how much depends on what you are going to plant.
The old grass and weeds will need months rather than weeks to die off
totally depending on the type of each. If you had couch grass in the
lawn then it may well grow through the membrane and gravel but you could
then spot treat it with glyposate.
It also depends on the quality of the membrane you have laid, some of
the cheaper ones are no better than putting down a couple of sheets of
newspaper.
I am using ground cover fabric on beds out the field to grow dahlias
through. Some of the fabric from Tildnet has been down for 5 years and
no problems, but some cheaper stuff I bought started to break down
within weeks, even this year with our lack of sunshine here in South
Wales, and the price difference was less than 10%.


Martin Brown 03-08-2015 03:52 PM

Stone Garden
 
On 01/08/2015 17:16, Janet wrote:
In article ,
says...

On Sat, 1 Aug 2015 11:44:11 +0100, "ag.richards"
wrote:

Hi going to put some all year round plants in this year,just covered my
garden with stone and a membrane
but underneath there used to be a lawn not a very nice one full weeds and
stuff,just want to know the best way to go


Hitting it with glyphosate two or three weeks before covering it over
would have been sensible but it is too late now.

about this does the soil underneath need treating or can I plant straight
away any advice most welcome what sort of
plants etc,Thx in advance T.R.


Not sure what you mean by "stone". Do you mean paving slabs, gravel or
something in between? If you have a membrane you presumably mean
gravel of some sort.
The best thing to do would have been to use Glyphosate on the weedy
lawn before putting down the membrane. You need to leave it all
covered to give time for the stuff underneath to die off in the dark,


On the contrary, when you use glyphosate, you want the plant to
survive long enough to translocate the poison to its roots. Covering it
would interfere with the process.


Crucially glyphosate ruins a particular pathway in the photosynthesis
process so you want the treated weeds actively growing in good sunlight
after treatment. It takes on that characteristic orangey look when dead.
Flash burning it when tinder dry makes seedlings easier to spot.

If you're using a membrane covered in either gravel or slabs, on a
weedy lawn, there's no need to weedkill first; total lack of light will
do that(and also, prevent any weed seeds in the soil from germinating.
You can make doubly sure by covering the lawn with cardboard, then
membrane, then the stone. (I've done this; instant gravelled area on
what was lawn until that morning.)

ideally waiting long enough (?) before you plant through the membrane.
There will be weeds that get through anyway from seeds in the soil.


No, there won't. It will be far too dark and newly germinated
seedlings don't have the strength to penetrate membrane let alone stone
topping it.


However, any thistle or bamboo roots will be easily able to punch
through all but the toughest weed fabrics or find their way to any gaps
or overlap joins.

Given that you presumably want a low maintainence garden chose mostly
evergreen shrubs and small trees and/or some bulbs. Every gap in the
membrane will be a weakness that weeds will exploit.

I favour plum slate as the most weed hostile mulching material.

--
Regards,
Martin Brown


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