Excellent video, I've done this before and it's like premium high quality hay. And if it drys enough you can store it in garage cans for a year or more. I do this so in the winter I can refresh my hen laying boxes with soft bedding that will keep the eggs from getting muddy..if you can keep them from eating it, they love it.
I mow in a square from outside in blowing the grass towards the center. That way I cut it several times so it breaks down faster. Then it's not hard to rake up and bag it.
Your garden is an inspiration to me! I am also a gardener and TH-cam creator like you! I have so much to learn about gardening and I appreciate your tips, tricks and advice! Please Keep sharing! I hope we can learn more about gardening from each other.
I just divide the yard into small sections. Cut one section at a time, using the bagger, then spread the clippings out on the cardboard I'm using to make walkways. When I need some, I grab it.
Have you tried using a scythe to harvest the grass for mulch? That’s what I use when making mulch for the garden. The amount of biomass that I can get from a small area is insane.
I bag it off the mower and use it green. I'm careful to not let it pile on tomato stems and other plants. Seems to work good for us. Green grass seems to make a nice weed barrier matt that dry hay or straw doesn't. If you use green grass don't leave it in a pile to long before you spread it cause it gets smoking hot.
I do the same with grass, here in our Montreal suburbia garden. It is by far my favorite mulch! Question : let say you've harvested more than you need . How would you go about storing the grass for the coming weeks?
I never harvest more than I need. But if I did, I'd pack the extra into big trash bags. I do that with dry, shredded leaves in the fall. Thanks for the comment.
No. There are weed seeds among the grass, but my Minibeds are heavily mulched. Seeds in the soil are not an issue with heavily mulched beds. The beds have bazillions of weed seeds in them already. Thanks for the question.
I use it right away as a mulch. If I had an excess, I would push it under the plastic around each minibed. It would break down there and feed the microherd. 👍
Can you make a video about where to buy good quality shovels and hoes? The ones I have purchased at our local hardware store have been of very poor quality. I don't really know what to look for in these tools, or what price I should expect to pay to aquire quality tools.
Definitely be wary of using straw as a mulch for your vegetable garden. I've killed a few tomatoes with bad straw as well. It's fairly common for commercial straw to have herbicides that affect non-grass plants in them. Sometimes this can be useful, like when seeding a lawn, but it can have terrible effects on non-grass plants you want, like tomatos. That doesn't mean you have to avoid all commercial mulches, though. There are plenty of types of mulch out there with different uses, and the vast majority are safe. For instance, I've used commercially bagged shredded hardwood mulch in flower beds for many years because it breaks down relatively quickly with the help of fungi to increase soil fertility over time, and have never had a problem. The only times I've ever encountered herbicide where it shouldn't be is in that straw I tried, and some cheap potting soil that I can't remember the name of. That being said, your grass mulch is more nutrient dense and will break down very quickly, which can be good and bad, and is one of the most easily available and useful organic gardening ingredients.
anyone else not a bit surprised when Herrick said "I have a system"?
Hi Randy,
Your comment made me laugh. 👍🤓
@@herrickkimball Glad to bring a little humor to your day. It's the least I can do considering the knowledge and humor you so often share with us
Excellent video, I've done this before and it's like premium high quality hay. And if it drys enough you can store it in garage cans for a year or more. I do this so in the winter I can refresh my hen laying boxes with soft bedding that will keep the eggs from getting muddy..if you can keep them from eating it, they love it.
Always enjoy your informative videos along with the PREMIUM humor!
I mow in a square from outside in blowing the grass towards the center. That way I cut it several times so it breaks down faster.
Then it's not hard to rake up and bag it.
Your garden is an inspiration to me! I am also a gardener and TH-cam creator like you! I have so much to learn about gardening and I appreciate your tips, tricks and advice! Please Keep sharing! I hope we can learn more about gardening from each other.
I just divide the yard into small sections. Cut one section at a time, using the bagger, then spread the clippings out on the cardboard I'm using to make walkways. When I need some, I grab it.
Have you tried using a scythe to harvest the grass for mulch? That’s what I use when making mulch for the garden. The amount of biomass that I can get from a small area is insane.
Yes. Love my scythe and scything. 👍
I add rebar on two edges of tarp and mow last pass onto tarp. ;)
Thank you for all your vids. (foot-tedding had me LOL)
I like it. 👍
I use a lawn sweeper to gather grass clippings.
I bag it off the mower and use it green. I'm careful to not let it pile on tomato stems and other plants. Seems to work good for us. Green grass seems to make a nice weed barrier matt that dry hay or straw doesn't. If you use green grass don't leave it in a pile to long before you spread it cause it gets smoking hot.
Would it be much more easier to have a bager on the mower than to take it ?
I do the same with grass, here in our Montreal suburbia garden. It is by far my favorite mulch! Question : let say you've harvested more than you need . How would you go about storing the grass for the coming weeks?
I never harvest more than I need. But if I did, I'd pack the extra into big trash bags. I do that with dry, shredded leaves in the fall. Thanks for the comment.
😀🌱🐢
Grass mulch genius!
Do you worry at all about grass and weed seeds getting in your beds?
No. There are weed seeds among the grass, but my Minibeds are heavily mulched. Seeds in the soil are not an issue with heavily mulched beds. The beds have bazillions of weed seeds in them already. Thanks for the question.
How do you store it, or do you always use it right away?
I use it right away as a mulch. If I had an excess, I would push it under the plastic around each minibed. It would break down there and feed the microherd. 👍
Can you make a video about where to buy good quality shovels and hoes? The ones I have purchased at our local hardware store have been of very poor quality. I don't really know what to look for in these tools, or what price I should expect to pay to aquire quality tools.
That would be a useful video. I'll add your idea to my list of video ideas. Thank you. 👍
Definitely be wary of using straw as a mulch for your vegetable garden. I've killed a few tomatoes with bad straw as well. It's fairly common for commercial straw to have herbicides that affect non-grass plants in them. Sometimes this can be useful, like when seeding a lawn, but it can have terrible effects on non-grass plants you want, like tomatos. That doesn't mean you have to avoid all commercial mulches, though. There are plenty of types of mulch out there with different uses, and the vast majority are safe. For instance, I've used commercially bagged shredded hardwood mulch in flower beds for many years because it breaks down relatively quickly with the help of fungi to increase soil fertility over time, and have never had a problem. The only times I've ever encountered herbicide where it shouldn't be is in that straw I tried, and some cheap potting soil that I can't remember the name of. That being said, your grass mulch is more nutrient dense and will break down very quickly, which can be good and bad, and is one of the most easily available and useful organic gardening ingredients.
Youd be an awesome cannabis cultivator.
I'm told that cannabis grows as aggressively as a "weed"
liked this everybody has grass
Yep. And grass = nitrogen. One of the most necessary fertilizers for productive gardening. 👍
That was about as exciting as watching paint, er ah, grass dry 🤣
👍LOL 😂
It seems like a lot of hard work and sitting there waiting for the grass to dry there are more things to do in the garden than watching grass dry
l avoid raking by using my bagger.
Gruesome 😂