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itzybitzy_gw

Mulching with pine needles:Good or Bad?

itzybitzy_gw
12 years ago

wondering if anyone has experience with pine needle mulch around vegetable garden. I borrowed some pine mulch from my tree and as I was aplying it on my vegetable garden I notice it smell like pine so I don't know if this is a good thing or not?Thanks.

Comments (18)

  • denninmi
    12 years ago

    IMHO, it's excellent. I'd take all I could get. If you have acidic soil already, you might need to add some lime to counteract the acidity in the pine needles, but most regions of the country don't have acidic soils.

  • Mad Ferret
    12 years ago

    I've used pine needle mulch on everything from fruit trees to chilli seedlings and have no ill effects, they retain the water well (by stoping evaporation) and dont blow about in the wind.

    Regards
    Nick

  • ltilton
    12 years ago

    I go over to my neighbors every year and rake up their pine straw to mulch my blueberries.

  • rhizo_1 (North AL) zone 7
    12 years ago

    It's a great mulch as long as you aren't using it to cover seeds. Pine straw has proven to have allelopathic properties that affect the seed germination of certain species of plants.

    When applied over seedlings and plants, it may help deter the germination of some weeds!

  • dicot
    12 years ago

    It's okay alone, I still prefer it mixed with bark, twigs and leaf mold. Then there are little to no drawbacks with it.

  • susan2010
    12 years ago

    Love it. It really seems to stay where you put it. It breaks down really slowly, so by pushing it aside to plant, you do get more than one season out of it (or at least I do) with a little augmentation.

  • Trill
    12 years ago

    I get bags and bags of pine needles every time we visit family in East Texas, and I mulch everything with them. So far no problems. Works great around potatos, tomatoes, strawberries and really, my entire veggie garden. Also around flowers and shrubs. The best thing is it is all free for the taking!

  • itzybitzy_gw
    Original Author
    12 years ago

    Thanks you guys I apreciate the feed back.

  • gardenman101
    12 years ago

    Now all I have to do is find a place where I can take it from, Leagally.

  • growinidaho
    12 years ago

    I mulch with pine needles. They work great but wear gloves. I did my onions last night. We live in the mtns so they are plentiful here. We like to find a place with lots of trees then rake them into piles near the road/trail so you can just rake them up into the truck. I put them between the rows too. After you walk on them for a yr they get broken so you can take handfuls out of the foot paths to reuse if needed...just sprinkle on. Also makes the foot paths softer for when you are on your knees!

  • Frankie_in_zone_7
    12 years ago

    Pine straw makes a kind of unique mulch for veggies in that it does not break down fast and so you can't expect to "dig it in" after a season. So as susan2010 said, you need to move it aside to plant or rake it off and re-apply it if you plan to spade up the soil or add amendments or whatever. OTOH it is easy to do that, as it is both fluffy and matted together and much easier to grab and set aside and then pile back on than other more durable mulches like bark nuggets or something.

    So, in one of my veggie areas that I turn over several times a year and keep very fertile with amendments for things that like rich soil, I usually use shredded leaves or compost for mulch, and I "save" my pine straw for mulching under shrubs and places I don't disturb much. But that's because I have some of this and some of that. If you have access to a large amount, by all means it is a good mulch.

  • ffreidl
    12 years ago

    I collect them at vacant parcels of land. I don't take much from any one spot at a time so that it doesn't affect any forest processes (or make anyone mad). I think it's a great mulch for strawberries, tomatoes, lettuces, (and blueberries, obviously).

  • sandra497
    8 years ago

    As soon as I saw the words "I 'borrowed' some pine mulch from my tree" I had questions about the capacity of the person writing the question. Confirmation was given when I continued reading and came across "I notice it smell like pine". Really??!!! Pine mulch from a pine tree smell like pine?

  • houzz4nan
    8 years ago

    When you live in the desert where there isn't much rain and you have grey pea gravel spread over your whole yard, the pine needles just make the yard look messy and dirty. They may be great for gardens if you have one.

  • daniel_nyc
    8 years ago

    Pine mulch is good.

    I don’t have it, so i use fabric mulch and I’m very happy with the product.


  • Pumpkin (zone 10A)
    8 years ago

    As a fellow desert dweller, I thoroughly wonder why you would consider mulching over pea gravel. My guess is that you don't know this is a thread about vegetable gardening.

  • theforgottenone1013 (SE MI zone 5b/6a)
    8 years ago
    last modified: 8 years ago

    I'm a bit perplexed by that as well, Marianne. Perhaps houzz4nan has a pine tree mulched with pea gravel and as the pine sheds needles they mix with the gravel? Not too sure how else the two could get combined unless it was done deliberately.

    Rodney