05/20/2026
Dalena Riess
The mulch matters as much as the soil underneath it.
Each material breathes, breaks down, and holds moisture differently. Match the mulch to the plant's root zone and most problems with weeds, rot, and moisture swing solve themselves before they start.
🌿 Four mulches matched to the plants that need them:
- Wood chips — best for fruit trees, berry bushes, and shrubs. The chunky pieces break down slowly and encourage the fungal activity that woody roots depend on. They mimic a forest floor, which is exactly the environment these plants evolved in. Replace every couple of years as they decompose
- Straw — suits tomatoes, peppers, and melons. Light enough to reflect sunlight and keep roots cool in summer heat. It also creates a splash barrier that stops soil from bouncing onto lower leaves during rain — which is how many fungal blights start. Easy to pull back when you need to fertilize or warm the soil
- Pine needles — belong under strawberries, azaleas, and garlic. The needles interlock like a woven mat instead of washing away in downpours. They drain fast and create a clean, dry surface that keeps ripening fruit and curing bulbs from sitting in moisture
- Shredded leaves — ideal for hostas, ferns, and heuchera. The crushed foliage breaks down quickly and builds the spongy, moisture-holding soil that shade plants thrive in. Free every fall — bag your neighbor's leaves if you don't have enough
🌱 The rules that prevent most mulching problems:
- Keep all mulch pulled back from plant stems — piling it against the base holds moisture against the crown and causes rot. A small gap is enough
- Stay around two to three inches deep — much thicker and rain can't reach the roots underneath
- Avoid thick layers of fresh grass clippings — they mat into a dense barrier that blocks air and water. Dry them first or mix with coarser material
- One material per bed, matched to what's growing there. The bed under the oak doesn't need the same mulch as the tomato row
One mulch matched to one bed. That's the difference between feeding your soil and working against it 🌿