
Garden Mulching Needed. Thanks to Nancy Marsden and all who attended the gardening meeting at Zeste’s on Saturday! I got home and found a reason to add some comments. In one word: mulch.
Towards the end of the meeting we asked Mr. Zeste why his native plants looked so beautiful. His answer was “16 yards of mulch and compost.” I’m trying to think where he got it but it was from a certified organic company up in Harlingen, who mainly uses chipped cedar (really mountain juniper) from the Austin-San Antonio Hill County. It is good stuff. It seemed like a load was maybe $250-$300 per load, if my memory serves right.
The picture at the top of this article is from the Brownsville landfill, which has quite a mature mulch recycling program. I have not sampled their wares but it seems like it should be just fine, perhaps more a mixture of palm fronds and stuff like that. It is difficult to translate the dollars per ton into a truckload, although it should be cheaper because of less trucking, one might surmise.
Bayview Farms and some other outlets have cypress chips, possible the best mulch but very expensive by comparison, like slightly over $20 per very large 40# bag. It is great stuff but when you get into needing 10-20 bags, can add up in price quite quickly.
I do not recommend using expensive mulches for the dune system, but for anything else I think we need truckloads of the stuff to really get any longevity out of our native planting projects. I did visit the “butterfly garden” down by Venus Street and it was a disaster, since no mulch was used. Given that the sandy clay down here has almost zero carbon content, it is imperative to use mulches and compost along with some kind of watering program (BTW, I did NOT see an irrigation system down there, and half the stuff really was dead as a doornail!).
I will be glad to split a load with somebody, since 5 yards of mulch and compost goes a lot faster then you would think, at 3-4 inches deep for all garden areas. As for the urban garden projects, I think we should have some fund-raisers for getting some of these $200 loads out to the Island, as pickup trucks just won’t cut it. Count me in for some help if you want it.

7 Comments:
the candlestick tree is a cassia -- grows well, lasts several years, should be pruned to maintain shape --wow
Question - is it best to sow the Candelstick seeds in the Spring or is now an OK time right now if kept warm & sunny? I only have 4-6 seeds.
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Now for another Sam-Blog. If you want to hear my cement mixer proposal, please read on.
We all know that mulch is a great idea, maybe 3-4 inches of it on top of the garden and a side dressing of compost every now and then for the needy plants.
But what goes in the new plant hole is perhaps even more important, since if that part is not right, the plant will die no matter how much mulch is used on top.
The commercial guys have a way of blending soil mixtures using some cement plant "hopper" technology. Concrete is just sand, gravel, cement, and water. Mix for a few minutes and you're done.
OK, we might want some Island sand, some real topsoil, compost, peat moss, mulch, vermicullite or foam pellets, maybe some pellet fertilizer, who knows?
Suffice it to say that the local soil is horrible if we really want to plant some beautiful plants, one needs a good mix, some maybe slightly acidic and some maybe not. Mixing stuff by the hole is OK for a plant or two in your backyard, but let's say we have like 200?
This is where the manly Mr. Concrete Truck can come in handy. I have seen this rig used up in Austin for "Dillo Dirt." The nice part is that you can blend stuff and then pour it where you want it - like they even have a chute.
Of course, getting a good soil mixture recipe and renting a concrete delivery truck could be a challenge, but why heck not? I think you can mix seven to ten cubic yards at a time, so we don't need to rent one for days or weeks. Just a day.
Consider it?
I would be interested in mulch. Maybe we can even have a load for the plant swap and people can buy what they need. I would like to put in a couple of comments about the Venus Butterfly Garden. Starting that project in July was, of course, not a great idea, but the land was made available and the kids were available with a plan. One of those now or never situations. Unfortunately, the water meter did not get put in until the middle of August. Then Shane's knee was injured, which made it difficult for him to do the watering ... as you can see there are many factors that play into this. The good news is that more dirt has arrived, the water meter is in. Now they just need to get the watering system in, new plantings and much mulch! And if anybody out there in SPI land has old lattice they want to get rid of please let me know.
Do you think we could ask the Town for a load of mulch for the Venus Butterfly Garden? Perhaps Shane should do this, but I think it would be a great idea ...
I went home Saturday and planted my seeds and lo and bohold some of them are already sprouting!!! Next time I will learn to label the pots as I don't know if it is the Candlestick tree or the one's Sam gave us but three of the pots are sprouting!
I saw that we have an organic soil landscaper on S. Garcia in Port Isabel. It would be interesting to here from him at the next meeting about mulch and growing native plants. I'd love to attend your next meeting whenever it is.
Good compost and soil is basic to a thriving garden, but my husband uses fertilizer too. His palms thrive on it! Have you noticed the new palms in PI turning yellow? What can help them before it's too late? So sad to see beautiful trees like those neglected.
That's an interesting question about the yellowing palms. Here's a link to some pretty factual stuff:
http://flrec.ifas.ufl.edu/HORT/Palms/lethal_yellow_facts.htm
Sorry, the way Blgger works you have to paste the entire thingy into your browser.
But the culprit appears to be a bug that inhabits turf grass such as St. Augustine and nursery Bermuda and other "golf course" grasses that spread a virus. Areas that do not have these hybrid turf grasses seem to not have this problem. The Royal Palm appears to not be affected, but the others from the Valley do.
-Sam
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