• Combo Subscription
  • Contact Us
  • Login
  • Register
  • 90 ITEMS
     
      • Chickens Health A-Z Guide

      • $9.99
      • Hobby Farms Jan/Feb 2025

      • $6.99
      • Hobby Farms Nov/Dec 2024

      • $6.99
      • Hobby Farms Sep/Oct 2024

      • $6.99
      • Hobby Farms Jul/Aug 2024

      • $6.99
      • Hobby Farms May/June 2024

      • $6.99
      • Hobby Farms Mar/Apr 2024

      • $6.99
      • Hobby Farms Jan/Feb 2024

      • $6.99
      • Hobby Farms Nov/Dec 2023

      • $6.99
      • Hobby Farms Sept/Oct 2023

      • $6.99
      • Hobby Farms Jan/Feb 2025 Digital

      • $4.99
      • Hobby Farms Nov/Dec 2024 Digital

      • $4.99
      • The 2025 Healing Herbs Digital annual is now available

      • $7.99
      • The all-new 2025 Hobby Farm Home Annual Digital is now available!

      • $7.99
      • Hobby Farms Sep/Oct 2024 Digital

      • $4.99
      • Hobby Farms Jul/Aug 2024 Digital

      • $4.99
      • The 2024 Goats 101 Digital annual is now available!

      • $7.99
      • 2024 Best of Hobby Farms Digital is now available!

      • $9.99
      • Hobby Farms May/June 2024 Digital

      • $4.99
      • Chickens- Jan/Feb 2025

      • $6.99
      • Chickens- Nov/Dec 2024

      • $6.99
      • Chickens- Sep/Oct 2024

      • $6.99
      • Chickens- Jul/Aug 2024

      • $6.99
      • Chickens- May/June 2024

      • $6.99
      • Chickens- Mar/Apr 2024

      • $6.99
      • Chickens- Jan/Feb 2024

      • $6.99
      • Chickens- Nov/Dec 2023

      • $6.99
      • 2025 Best of Chickens Digital

      • $7.99
      • The 2025 Backyard Chickens Digital

      • $7.99
      • 2025 Ducks 101 Digital

      • $7.99
      • 2025 Chickens 101 Digital

      • $7.99
      • Chickens- Mar/Apr 2025 Digital

      • $4.99
      • Chickens- Jan/Feb 2025 Digital

      • $4.99
      • Chickens- Nov/Dec 2024 Digital

      • $4.99
      • Chickens- Sep/Oct 2024 Digital

      • $4.99
      • Chicks Combo Offer 5-in-1: Chicken Coops and Playgrounds, Chickens 101, Ducks 101, Backyard Chickens and Urban Farm.

      • $29.95
      • Special Edition Combo: Best of Hobby Farms Home 2024, Healing Herbs, Goats 101 and Best of HF SIP

      • $29.95
      • The 2025 Healing Herbs annual is now available

      • $10.99
      • The all-new 2025 Hobby Farm Home annual is now available!

      • $10.99
      • The 2024 Goats 101 annual is now available!

      • $10.99
      • The 2024 Beekeeping 101 annual is now available

      • $10.99
      • The 2024 Urban Farm annual is now available

      • $10.99
      • Order The 2024 Backyard Chickens annual today

      • $10.99
      • order the 2022 chickens 101 annual today
      • Order the 2022 Chickens 101 annual today

      • $49.95
      • The 2021 Beekeeping 101 annual is now available

      • $19.98
      • Living off the Grid 2021

      • $19.98
      • The 2022 Goats 101 annual is now available!

      • $39.96
      • The 2021 Goats 101 annual is now available!

      • $19.98
      • Living Off the Grid 2020

      • $29.97
      • 2021 Best of Hobby Farms: 20th Anniversary Special

      • $29.98
      • The 2021 Healing Herbs annual is now available

      • $39.96
      • Order the 2021 Urban Chickens annual today

      • $29.97
      • The 2022 Urban Farm annual is now available

      • $19.98
      • Get all four Chick Days publications today

      • $59.90
      • The 2022 Beekeeping 101 annual is now available

      • $19.98
      • Order 2024 Ducks 101 annual today

      • $10.99
      • Order the 2024 Chicken Coops & Playgrounds
      • Order the 2024 Chickens 101 annual today

      • $10.99
      • Order the 2024 Chicken Coops & Playgrounds

      • $10.99
      • The all-new 2024 Hobby Farm Home annual is now available!

      • $11.99
      • The 2023 Healing Herbs annual is now available

      • $10.99
      • 2023 Best of Hobby Farms is now available and Goat 101 Digital absolutely FREE.

      • $14.95
      • 2023 Best of Hobby Farms is now available!

      • $14.99
      • The 2023 Urban Farm annual is now available

      • $10.99
      • Get all four Chick Days publications

      • $39.95
      • Order the 2023 Chicken Coops & Playgrounds

      • $10.99
      • Order the 2023 Chickens 101 annual today

      • $10.99
      • Purchase the 2023 Ducks 101 annual today

      • $10.99
      • Order the 2023 Backyard Chickens annual today

      • $10.99
      • The 2022 Healing Herbs annual is now available

      • $9.99
  • facebook
  • twitter
  • instagram
  • youtube

Grow Cover Crops For In-Situ Mulch

Interested in using cover crops in-situ mulch but not sure where to start? Luckily, there are a few options for growing your own organic surface layer.

article-post
by Zach Loeks
PHOTO: Andreas Göllner/Pixabay

Cover crops are used for fertility, soil protection, and to outcompete weeds. They can also be grown in place as mulch. This in-situ mulch replaces imported mulches to help crop growth by suppressing weeds, retaining moisture, regulating soil heating and more.

Techniques can include:

  1. flail mowing to chop and leave mulch on the bed top surface
  2. roller/crimping to create an un-chopped unidirectional mulch

Both approaches, however, must be considered wisely.

Broadcast Seeding into In-situ Mulch

Flail mowing creates an open-mulch, which can allow aggressive weeds to penetrate. However, pre-weeding with tarp culture and then broadcasting can yield high-density well-mulched crops. The open-mulch helps seed germinate and protects crop development.

However, if crop establishment is low and weed pressure is high, this can be disastrous! Proper pre-weeding and broadcasting is important. Mixing seed with sand helps ensure even broadcasting.

Roller Crimper Method

Crimping cover crop breaks the vascular system, killing the plant. And rolling lays it in a unidirectional mat. Proper timing (seed milk-stage) is important to ensure your cover crop (rye, for example) doesn’t keep growing after rolling.

Subscribe now

Pre-weeding is still important to remove aggressive weeds. But crimping produces a closed-mulch that is much more weed-proof. This is best for transplanted crops that can easily be planted into mulch.


Read more: Organic no-till growing is good for you and you land.


Cover Crops for Mulch

Rye and vetch are classic cover crops used for in-situ mulch. These are popular for both rolling crimping and the flail mowing method.

Rye actually has a weed-seed-suppressing effect by releasing chemicals into the soil!

Vetch is a legume and adds nitrogen to help your crops grow. Other popular options include oats, annual rye, peas and clovers. Clover are a biannual and need to be killed by tarp culture for best results.

Crops can also be used for in-situ mulch. This is called “crop cover cropping.” In fact, it is really efficient because you have already established a vegetable crop. You just leave it to become a cover crop.

Then you can simply proceed with any of the recommended methods for turning it into an in-situ mulch.


Read more: What exactly is a cover crop? Turns out you have some options.


Combining Methods

Sometimes we want the best of both worlds. You may want to grow a crop cover crop and under sow it to rye, which you allow to become a very dense cover crop for in-situ mulch. You may also want to use different techniques for turning the crop into the mulch.

How about rolling and crimping it? Or flail mowing it, then using the zipper bed technique, pulling two pieces of weed barrier to meet in the middle of the bed and plant a row of melons? In this example, the melons would have great access to nutrients and organic matter from the cover crop.

They would also gain weed protection from the weed barrier. And where the zipper meets, they would have a mulch to keep weeds out too. This way, you are less at risk of mis-managing pre-weeding techniques.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

CAPTCHA Image