My grandpa was born in Germany around the turn of the last century. Placement! He had them run along the hill to capture the water to make a series of terraces. He dug the ditch like you did, then he built a fire in the ditch. That followed by punky wood that was no longer good for burning (like 2 yr old firewood), leafy stuff/field cuttings/compost, then we kids poured on buckets of water (old school), ... repeat with medium wood, repeat with tiny wood, finish with top soil removed from ditch. His beds were very high! It has been years, but I remember the first year being as tall as me as a kid. First year was a cover crop. His rows were maybe 20' long. They were not so tall when I grew up, but they were still terraces after 30+ years.
I did this under my avocado tree. It gave me 50kgs this year, after nine years of no fruit. Also basketloads of chayotes, bitter gourd, lemongrass, syngonium (house plant), jackaranda sapling, lime, perilla seeds, marigold, rain lilies, curry leaf, lemon basil, amaranth, and hopefully the sweet potatoes will also come. Wow. This is truly a magic trick method. I'm in Kathmandu; Nepal, btw. Zone Himalaya :-)
I have been doing this method for decades. Long before I knew it was a thing. It works absolutely amazingly. The soil gets better and better every year and the biological activity and microorganism density is insane.
I used this concept on a much smaller scale last fall to fill up Rubbermaid storage containers that my neighbor gave me. We were trimming back an Althea (Rose of Sharon) bush and I took advantage of all those sticks and trimmings. Imagine my surprise this spring when dozens of Althea babies began sprouting in my containers among the carrots and onions!
Ohhh... I have come to hate Rose of Sharon with the fire of 1000 suns. My neighbors on both sides have it and it's old enough to be the original, non-sterile varieties. Every spring I'm pulling out THOUSANDS of seedlings. If a seedling hides from me then I'm pulling out a young tree.
This was so cool! Especially the digging into the dirt 6 mo. later, to see what stuffs looked like underneath. I appreciated the step by step process for sure, but the explanations for why steps were taken, even the simple stuff, was really useful. Thanks you!
I had no idea it would be so special to see wheat growing in an actual garden. These days, wheat is usually something you see on tv at large agro-corp facilities. It was beautiful seeing a small field of it growing like it might have in past times
Thanks. I made a hugelkulture in the fall 2019 it was 3' under ground and 4' above. It never reduced water use, and was honestly quite disappointing. This year I removed the above ground layer because it was invaded by a gopher. I will place shallow raised beds with hardware cloth on the bottom. To make use of the wood in the ground, but give the veggies a buffer from the gophers. Maybe your smaller hugelkulture is a better option in the hot dry weather. Thanks, and good luck.
I like to add kitchen scraps and lawn trimmings with the wood at the bottom. I feel it attracts insects and bacteria quicker - also works to heat up the bed a bit, i planted 3 months after preparing my bed and couple inches down it was warm to the touch in the middle of the bed and worked great for some crops.
We've been making a "lazy" hüglekultur bed for a couple of years now because our neighbor's linden tree is slowly dying and drops branches into our yard with every storm. So we've just piled them into a pyramid and tossed clippings, etc. on top of them. It looks like it's aged enough that it's about ready for something to go in it. Might try a squash this year.
Jacque, this was an awesome video about Hugelkutur gardening. The best of the many videos I've seen on Hugelkutur gardening over ten years on UTube.. Congratulations and thank you. You're a great teacher. Liz
I used this method in my raised beds before i even knew it was a thing, it just made sense to me. I didnt quite use large logs but i filled half my raised beds with old leaves and lilac bush trimmings. Its been 2 years and everything is dirt now
I loved my Hugel beds. I had them for about 12 years until they were wiped out during the flood of 2019. They were a great way to a variety of crops with flowers helping with pollination. If you can find the space, materials and time to build these, by all means do. Many HOAs and townships are not allowing these in yards because of a "Lack of uniformity" and an eyesore. Please check to see if you can build these in your yard.
Following up on folks that should join your team... i HIGHLY recommended reaching out to more than farmers. Im absolutely enamored with their way of living and how they appraoch homesteading.
Suggest a community gardener as well. I live in a high rise in the DC metro and have been a community gardener for over 10 years. 30 by 30 in 7b. I’m not photogenic so am not volunteering!
Fantastic experiment and wonderfully clear explanations. Yes to 1-year, 2-year updates and reports on how your next ones do too! Would be interesting to see if hugelkultur beds in an area of the garden with poorer drainage (wetter) would help absorb that extra water into the big chunks of wood and modulate the water content better.
How wonderful! This kind of reminds me of this quote about planting trees: “the true meaning of life is to plant trees, under whose shade you do not expect to sit” You’re helping your own garden but think of how rich the soil will be in a few decades for the next person to benefit from!
I just updated two of my three rotted wood raised beds to metal and was looking for something to do with the the rotted 2x6s and 4x4s. I was thinking of doing a mushroom bed with stropharia/winecaps, I may give this a go and see how that works. I figure worst case I get good soil to use elsewhere.
Apply the principle and use it in your "pots". Even by amending my soil, I'm putting small dried twigs at the bottom of the pot to help give it air, space, and something for the roots to latch onto when/if they get to the bottom.
$0 DIY Raised Bed Method Hügelkultur. Great title. I sub here but others that don't may miss this valuable video. Looking forward to more great videos Jacques.
I threw in a 5-7 year old log into a very large stainless steel planter. I threw soil conditioner on top of the log and a toooon of potting soil on top. I planted my tomatoes and peppers in here. I’m hoping for the best!!!
Oh my gosh thank you so much for taking the time to do a video like this. I’m sure it has been hard not to peek into that dirt. After seeing this. I feel like I would just love to do this to my entire yard super impressive
My 2nd year LARGE hugelkultur bed is blowing my first season no-till beds out of the water. It's shocking. The garlic and sweet onions I have going on it look like they want to go to the state fair. But it did take a full year for it to really get going on the fertility. But I do have a tall Birdie's bed I was trying to figure out how to fill.....I'm totally going to fill the bottom half with wood, which I have!
Wow... talk about a great experiment. Sure, I've heard about it for years, but seeing it really brings is home. That really does act as a moisture sink. I'm sold
You and Kevin are awesome! Total rookie here, so, dumb question alert! 1, would it make sense to pre-soak the old spongy wood before hand?? And #2, would it make sense to put worms in the last layer prior to the green leafy plant trimmings, just above the wood and dirt?? Thanks so much!
I made a hugelkultur in my back yard a few years ago. Made a video digging in at the two year mark. I was expecting moist soil but it was still poorer quality, very dry soil, worse than all the yummy soil snacks I added at the build. My hypothesis is that because we were in a drought for years 1-2 (and 3) of the hugel, there was not enough moisture for the bed to retain in the first place. I did hand water, I had to, but nothing is as effective as a soaking rain, in my experience. This summer would be year 4 of the hugel, I should dig again and see if the bed quality has improved at all. I will say that even though it hasn't met my expectations, it does grow food, I still plant on it, so it has value. Great video, very helpful, I hope more people try a hugel. Still glad I tried it. If I had room, I would do another, just to get rid of the yard waste.
I started a Hügelbeet just about a month before you posted this video, and it's basically exactly what you did - except I didn't have the idea of using wheat to cover the hill. Now, after two months occasional watering during dry spells in-between heavy rains, it's starting to show that where there's no plant to hold the soil in place, the mound is starting to fall out of shape.
I've just built a raised bed out of a collapsed metal shed and reused wood and an currently filling many many wheelbarrows full of logs, branches, twigs, leaves, rabbit droppings etc hoping it works well as I'm in almeria area Spain as we've had no substantial rain for over a year 😔 P.s.if u ever fancy a garden makeover episode and a holiday to Spain...... I can definitely help with that 😁🙏🙏😅
Made mine with a combination of hot compost and 15 percent biochar last years rabbit manure coffee grounds egg shells leaves and straw for mulch. I wish I would have cut branches down shorter. But I have a 7 foot cherry tomato
7-8 years lifespan per bed. Best thing to try is berries, they have a mop root system particularly suited to hugel kulture, and crop is heaviest during driest part of year so water retention is ideal. in garden bed, dig hole, skirt with weedmat onto garden bed sides and down into hole under logs to stop runners.
And Jacques, hit the literature for wheat and mycorrhizal fungi! Your wheat may be getting help from friends related to the wood, not just the water in the wood. :)
My raised beds have to be very tall because they are on a slope. I built them to be 32" tall to deal with the steep slope we had. So the bottom of the beds are all logs. And I put sticks and wood chips to fill in the gaps. Then I have 16" of raised bed potting mix. I'm going to add the native clay back with the logs for my next beds since settling is pretty significant each year. I should dig down to see what the logs look like now that it's been 3 years.
Our community garden might be relocating, and I am planning strategies of what to prioritize to salvage from my current plot, which is mostly kitchen herbs and vegetables. How best to start over in the new location when I only have access to it during the growing season in 5b. Generally, we only have nearby access to water from May through October, and aren’t supposed to access the garden outside of that period.
hey Jacques en Erik, i was watching an old video of you building a garden voor kehlani and wonderd why you always buy bags of soil. Here in the Netherlands if you want to buy it in bulk you can get a bigbag full with the same soil for a cheaper price and without the waste.
In the US availability depends on where you are. In a lot of areas you can get a landscaping business to bring a truckload of soil/compost/mulch/whatever, the issue is that you have to have somewhere for them to dump it on your property. The first year I lived in my house I ordered 6 cubic yards (about 4.5 cubic meters) of soil and it took up most of my small front yard. Now that's all flowers so I don't have anywhere for them to dump a load. The biggest bags I've ever seen around where I live (Pennsylvania) are 3 cubic feet (not even a tenth of a cubic meter). I try to buy as little as possible.
So cool 🙌 I need to do this. We have a decently large wooded property, so there are always decaying trees around if we go looking. I’m guessing that sod we lift to expand flower beds would also be good to add? I used some in the bottom of some huge pots to cut down on container soil.
We had a huge jungle of apple, fig, and ceanothus branches to get rid of and used this method in our raised beds last year. Its amazing how fast that all breaks down. And it was so easy to turn the beds this year. I think the pet rats' beddingade the veg extra spicy😂
I'm doing a simplified/partial version of this in my Birdies raised bed. I have a bunch of brush that's been sitting in a pile in my backyard so I figure I can use some of that.
I have sandy soil, probably 70% sand, would this method work or would I need to add a landscape material below the logs to retain as much good soil I would be adding?
This is all great information! We have done something similar, but we can’t keep the grass and weeds from growing on top of it. What is your solution from that happening to your mound?
Hi, due to allelopathy, are there certain species of wood to avoid? Was told Apple, Alder, Cottonwood, Birch and willow are the best and to absolutely avoid anything from the genus Juglans, such as Walnut. Also heard Pine and Fir can hinder germination? I live in Oregon where Fir and Pine is ubiquitous.
Avoid anything that is very resistant to rot and anything that will sprout from a twig you half stick the tiniest twig into the ground (e.g., willow). Pines and firs seem to depend on soil type, etc. of the location. For some people pine and fir work great, for others, not so much.
I have heard that hugelkultur doesn't work as well in the actual tropics since things break down so much faster than in other climates. So it ends up being less work to just add compost for fertilization (I don't live in the tropics though, so hugelkultur works great for me!)
Can you use all wood chips instead of logs and branches? I have an abundance of extra chipped and it would be convenient to use as the base layer of my mound
This was very interesting and informative. We had a bunch of tree limbs come down a few months ago after a heavy wind storm, we have them in our burn pile. We have 2+ acres in Houston. Can the wood ash be used in this type of Hugelkultur? Thank you, I always learn a lot from Jacques!!
I'm hoping to build a couple of raised beds this autumn/winter, and want to put wood in the bottom. But my question is: how big a concern are termites? I can't imagine that being buried under a foot or two of dirt would kill them. I don't have any wood of my own, so I was thinking I could probably check for free stuff...But I also don't want to bring pests in! For reference, im in central Texas. I just attended a compost workshop last weekend, and one of the other participants said when he stopped for free mulch, a city employee even told him there was a good chance it had termites. 😬
There are termites in the soil, so you are correct that being buried isn't going to kill them. That said, the general advice is, yes, there's a possibility that your hugelkultur bed will become a termite buffet. HOWEVER, they are part of the process of breaking down the wood, so they're beneficial that way. Just build your bed as far away from your house as possible and monitor closely for anything moving towards your house.
I love your videos! They are very informative! I have one question. I did a hugulkultur bed but now is full of red ants, big ants. 😢what should I do? I put some diometacious earth, but when i spray water or work on the bed they surface by the 100's.😢😢 I live in central Florida and the heat is craa!zy, you water and water just runs thru!😢😢 any advice will really be appreciated. ❤
thanks, Jacques. I have lots of invasive Holly that I'd like to cut down and repurpose, but don't want to essentially just "plant" them in a hugel mound. Is there any danger of Holly logs sprouting under the mound? Thanks.
I’m a very beginning gardener so forgive this question but I’m curious if I can use grass clippings as part of the materials used for building the mound?
I have a bunch of eucalyptus logs that I could use for this, but would that be suitable? Doesn't eucalyptus have allopathic chemicals in it? You know how prevalent Eucalyptus is here in San Diego!
Appreciate you digging up your hugelkultur bed so we can witness what's happening. Its essentially wrecked the delicate ecosystem that's developing in there over the season. Surprised there arent' a ton of worms though.
hi jacques 🤗 thanks for sharing more great info. excellent explanations and demo. ill definitely head over to your channel for the follow-up video. tfs
The thing that gives me pause from trying this, is concern the fungus would get out of control. I've had problems with that before and am always seeking to have well-draining soils. I'm not completely closed minded to this technique but am wondering if anyone has any experiences using this and was fungus a concern for it?
The tree of liberty is........well, my lawyer says I shouldn't finish that statement. Also the fact that EG liked this post says amazing things about Epic.
If you want to see what I do with all that wheat and what I plant in this bed next then be sure to check my channel out!
😊😊
that ain't much wheat, think combine harvester . . .
My grandpa was born in Germany around the turn of the last century. Placement! He had them run along the hill to capture the water to make a series of terraces. He dug the ditch like you did, then he built a fire in the ditch. That followed by punky wood that was no longer good for burning (like 2 yr old firewood), leafy stuff/field cuttings/compost, then we kids poured on buckets of water (old school), ... repeat with medium wood, repeat with tiny wood, finish with top soil removed from ditch. His beds were very high! It has been years, but I remember the first year being as tall as me as a kid. First year was a cover crop. His rows were maybe 20' long. They were not so tall when I grew up, but they were still terraces after 30+ years.
I did this under my avocado tree. It gave me 50kgs this year, after nine years of no fruit. Also basketloads of chayotes, bitter gourd, lemongrass, syngonium (house plant), jackaranda sapling, lime, perilla seeds, marigold, rain lilies, curry leaf, lemon basil, amaranth, and hopefully the sweet potatoes will also come. Wow. This is truly a magic trick method. I'm in Kathmandu; Nepal, btw. Zone Himalaya :-)
Please make a 1 year or a 2 year update video on the same bed!
I have had this bed for 4 years. It looks messy bc I’m not done planting. FULL of black soil, worms and rolly polly’s.
We will!
I have been doing this method for decades. Long before I knew it was a thing. It works absolutely amazingly. The soil gets better and better every year and the biological activity and microorganism density is insane.
It's sooooo cheap and easy
same , hope you have tried berry crops in them
I used this concept on a much smaller scale last fall to fill up Rubbermaid storage containers that my neighbor gave me. We were trimming back an Althea (Rose of Sharon) bush and I took advantage of all those sticks and trimmings. Imagine my surprise this spring when dozens of Althea babies began sprouting in my containers among the carrots and onions!
Ohhh... I have come to hate Rose of Sharon with the fire of 1000 suns. My neighbors on both sides have it and it's old enough to be the original, non-sterile varieties. Every spring I'm pulling out THOUSANDS of seedlings. If a seedling hides from me then I'm pulling out a young tree.
This was so cool! Especially the digging into the dirt 6 mo. later, to see what stuffs looked like underneath. I appreciated the step by step process for sure, but the explanations for why steps were taken, even the simple stuff, was really useful. Thanks you!
I had no idea it would be so special to see wheat growing in an actual garden. These days, wheat is usually something you see on tv at large agro-corp facilities. It was beautiful seeing a small field of it growing like it might have in past times
Thanks. I made a hugelkulture in the fall 2019 it was 3' under ground and 4' above. It never reduced water use, and was honestly quite disappointing. This year I removed the above ground layer because it was invaded by a gopher. I will place shallow raised beds with hardware cloth on the bottom. To make use of the wood in the ground, but give the veggies a buffer from the gophers.
Maybe your smaller hugelkulture is a better option in the hot dry weather. Thanks, and good luck.
I like to add kitchen scraps and lawn trimmings with the wood at the bottom. I feel it attracts insects and bacteria quicker - also works to heat up the bed a bit, i planted 3 months after preparing my bed and couple inches down it was warm to the touch in the middle of the bed and worked great for some crops.
We've been making a "lazy" hüglekultur bed for a couple of years now because our neighbor's linden tree is slowly dying and drops branches into our yard with every storm. So we've just piled them into a pyramid and tossed clippings, etc. on top of them. It looks like it's aged enough that it's about ready for something to go in it. Might try a squash this year.
Jacque, this was an awesome video about Hugelkutur gardening. The best of the many videos I've seen on Hugelkutur gardening over ten years on UTube.. Congratulations and thank you. You're a great teacher. Liz
I used this method in my raised beds before i even knew it was a thing, it just made sense to me. I didnt quite use large logs but i filled half my raised beds with old leaves and lilac bush trimmings. Its been 2 years and everything is dirt now
Love to hear it
Any recommendations for deep rooting seeds that aren’t wheat. Gluten intolerances in this household so want to avoid contamination.
Hügel (German) = hill, mound. Thank you so much dear Jascques, I love this method. XX
I built 2 of these 3 years ago. Its insanely productive. The plants that grow on them are huge.
I loved my Hugel beds. I had them for about 12 years until they were wiped out during the flood of 2019. They were a great way to a variety of crops with flowers helping with pollination. If you can find the space, materials and time to build these, by all means do. Many HOAs and townships are not allowing these in yards because of a "Lack of uniformity" and an eyesore. Please check to see if you can build these in your yard.
Following up on folks that should join your team... i HIGHLY recommended reaching out to more than farmers. Im absolutely enamored with their way of living and how they appraoch homesteading.
Good call!
Lol the channel is call3d morethanfarmers @epicgardening
Suggest a community gardener as well. I live in a high rise in the DC metro and have been a community gardener for over 10 years. 30 by 30 in 7b. I’m not photogenic so am not volunteering!
Congratulations Kevin on 3,000,000 subscribers! I enjoy and learn from your videos.
Awesome, thank you!
Fantastic experiment and wonderfully clear explanations. Yes to 1-year, 2-year updates and reports on how your next ones do too! Would be interesting to see if hugelkultur beds in an area of the garden with poorer drainage (wetter) would help absorb that extra water into the big chunks of wood and modulate the water content better.
How wonderful! This kind of reminds me of this quote about planting trees: “the true meaning of life is to plant trees, under whose shade you do not expect to sit”
You’re helping your own garden but think of how rich the soil will be in a few decades for the next person to benefit from!
I just updated two of my three rotted wood raised beds to metal and was looking for something to do with the the rotted 2x6s and 4x4s. I was thinking of doing a mushroom bed with stropharia/winecaps, I may give this a go and see how that works. I figure worst case I get good soil to use elsewhere.
Apply the principle and use it in your "pots". Even by amending my soil, I'm putting small dried twigs at the bottom of the pot to help give it air, space, and something for the roots to latch onto when/if they get to the bottom.
$0 DIY Raised Bed Method Hügelkultur.
Great title.
I sub here but others that don't may miss this valuable video. Looking forward to more great videos Jacques.
Appreciate it!
I threw in a 5-7 year old log into a very large stainless steel planter. I threw soil conditioner on top of the log and a toooon of potting soil on top. I planted my tomatoes and peppers in here. I’m hoping for the best!!!
Oh my gosh thank you so much for taking the time to do a video like this. I’m sure it has been hard not to peek into that dirt. After seeing this. I feel like I would just love to do this to my entire yard super impressive
I love these videos that show the whole process over time. Thank you for taking the time to make them!
My 2nd year LARGE hugelkultur bed is blowing my first season no-till beds out of the water. It's shocking. The garlic and sweet onions I have going on it look like they want to go to the state fair. But it did take a full year for it to really get going on the fertility. But I do have a tall Birdie's bed I was trying to figure out how to fill.....I'm totally going to fill the bottom half with wood, which I have!
Wow... talk about a great experiment. Sure, I've heard about it for years, but seeing it really brings is home. That really does act as a moisture sink. I'm sold
It's killer.
You and Kevin are awesome! Total rookie here, so, dumb question alert! 1, would it make sense to pre-soak the old spongy wood before hand?? And #2, would it make sense to put worms in the last layer prior to the green leafy plant trimmings, just above the wood and dirt?? Thanks so much!
I built one of these a few years ago, I might dig it up and see what it’s like inside!
I made a hugelkultur in my back yard a few years ago. Made a video digging in at the two year mark. I was expecting moist soil but it was still poorer quality, very dry soil, worse than all the yummy soil snacks I added at the build. My hypothesis is that because we were in a drought for years 1-2 (and 3) of the hugel, there was not enough moisture for the bed to retain in the first place. I did hand water, I had to, but nothing is as effective as a soaking rain, in my experience. This summer would be year 4 of the hugel, I should dig again and see if the bed quality has improved at all. I will say that even though it hasn't met my expectations, it does grow food, I still plant on it, so it has value.
Great video, very helpful, I hope more people try a hugel. Still glad I tried it. If I had room, I would do another, just to get rid of the yard waste.
th-cam.com/video/vYVSH2RpHcQ/w-d-xo.htmlsi=Z9ucrFDVQw4Akt3m
This was so helpful! I'm excited to try this in my garden.
I started a Hügelbeet just about a month before you posted this video, and it's basically exactly what you did - except I didn't have the idea of using wheat to cover the hill. Now, after two months occasional watering during dry spells in-between heavy rains, it's starting to show that where there's no plant to hold the soil in place, the mound is starting to fall out of shape.
I built my first huglkultur bed over this past winter, planted summer squash as a cover crop, gonna add more layers once the squash is done.
I've just built a raised bed out of a collapsed metal shed and reused wood and an currently filling many many wheelbarrows full of logs, branches, twigs, leaves, rabbit droppings etc hoping it works well as I'm in almeria area Spain as we've had no substantial rain for over a year 😔
P.s.if u ever fancy a garden makeover episode and a holiday to Spain...... I can definitely help with that 😁🙏🙏😅
Made mine with a combination of hot compost and 15 percent biochar last years rabbit manure coffee grounds egg shells leaves and straw for mulch. I wish I would have cut branches down shorter. But I have a 7 foot cherry tomato
I wish I had saw this earlier this spring!!! I just built my first garden bed and this would’ve been awesome to do!
Jacque you and Eric really need some garden gnomes!! Maybe it’s just southern thing.
ha.
You could try using banana leaves and comfrey in a bed. I use those plus ti leaves and get the best crops from it
7-8 years lifespan per bed. Best thing to try is berries, they have a mop root system particularly suited to hugel kulture, and crop is heaviest during driest part of year so water retention is ideal. in garden bed, dig hole, skirt with weedmat onto garden bed sides and down into hole under logs to stop runners.
Thank you for this video. You’re an A+ instructor.
I am extremely depressed. Most of the time. These videos help. Thank you for your work😊
And Jacques, hit the literature for wheat and mycorrhizal fungi! Your wheat may be getting help from friends related to the wood, not just the water in the wood. :)
You buried Eric under there, didn’t you? 😮
Shhh ;)
I planted my pumpkins in a hugelkultur mound this year. So far so good even though I didn't do half as good of a job as you did!
My raised beds have to be very tall because they are on a slope. I built them to be 32" tall to deal with the steep slope we had. So the bottom of the beds are all logs. And I put sticks and wood chips to fill in the gaps. Then I have 16" of raised bed potting mix. I'm going to add the native clay back with the logs for my next beds since settling is pretty significant each year. I should dig down to see what the logs look like now that it's been 3 years.
Our community garden might be relocating, and I am planning strategies of what to prioritize to salvage from my current plot, which is mostly kitchen herbs and vegetables.
How best to start over in the new location when I only have access to it during the growing season in 5b. Generally, we only have nearby access to water from May through October, and aren’t supposed to access the garden outside of that period.
hey Jacques en Erik, i was watching an old video of you building a garden voor kehlani and wonderd why you always buy bags of soil. Here in the Netherlands if you want to buy it in bulk you can get a bigbag full with the same soil for a cheaper price and without the waste.
In the US availability depends on where you are. In a lot of areas you can get a landscaping business to bring a truckload of soil/compost/mulch/whatever, the issue is that you have to have somewhere for them to dump it on your property. The first year I lived in my house I ordered 6 cubic yards (about 4.5 cubic meters) of soil and it took up most of my small front yard. Now that's all flowers so I don't have anywhere for them to dump a load. The biggest bags I've ever seen around where I live (Pennsylvania) are 3 cubic feet (not even a tenth of a cubic meter). I try to buy as little as possible.
Great video Jacques! I am going to try this for next year!
Excellent teaching video, Jacques. Will most definitely try this. Thank you!
So cool 🙌 I need to do this. We have a decently large wooded property, so there are always decaying trees around if we go looking. I’m guessing that sod we lift to expand flower beds would also be good to add? I used some in the bottom of some huge pots to cut down on container soil.
Yep, you can add!
We had a huge jungle of apple, fig, and ceanothus branches to get rid of and used this method in our raised beds last year. Its amazing how fast that all breaks down. And it was so easy to turn the beds this year. I think the pet rats' beddingade the veg extra spicy😂
Can you plant trees in a hugelculture mound or would it most likely rot and or get root disturbance from the decomposition?
I have mounds of chipped wood - would it be OK to use that instead of larger wood?
I'm doing a simplified/partial version of this in my Birdies raised bed. I have a bunch of brush that's been sitting in a pile in my backyard so I figure I can use some of that.
Super smart move
Does it make a difference which wood you use? Is fresh cut pine ok ?
Thank u learned hard way. However this input is true and considers so much and long term is critical and so few are short sighted.
I have sandy soil, probably 70% sand, would this method work or would I need to add a landscape material below the logs to retain as much good soil I would be adding?
I'm loving your channel from Ojai ❣️
This is all great information! We have done something similar, but we can’t keep the grass and weeds from growing on top of it. What is your solution from that happening to your mound?
This is my second season with a raised hugelkultur bed. I can attest that it does not need near as much watering in my experience.
Hi, due to allelopathy, are there certain species of wood to avoid? Was told Apple, Alder, Cottonwood, Birch and willow are the best and to absolutely avoid anything from the genus Juglans, such as Walnut. Also heard Pine and Fir can hinder germination? I live in Oregon where Fir and Pine is ubiquitous.
Avoid anything that is very resistant to rot and anything that will sprout from a twig you half stick the tiniest twig into the ground (e.g., willow). Pines and firs seem to depend on soil type, etc. of the location. For some people pine and fir work great, for others, not so much.
I have heard that hugelkultur doesn't work as well in the actual tropics since things break down so much faster than in other climates. So it ends up being less work to just add compost for fertilization (I don't live in the tropics though, so hugelkultur works great for me!)
Can you use all wood chips instead of logs and branches? I have an abundance of extra chipped and it would be convenient to use as the base layer of my mound
Can pine tree logs be used in the base? I have a ton of them!
This was very interesting and informative.
We had a bunch of tree limbs come down a few months ago after a heavy wind storm, we have them in our burn pile.
We have 2+ acres in Houston.
Can the wood ash be used in this type of Hugelkultur?
Thank you, I always learn a lot from Jacques!!
Made one and I’m noticing the soil drys out a lot faster than my other beds. Probably does a lot better in a more wet non Mediterranean climate
Will any wood work? I have a lot of mesquite, ebony, ash, and palo verde around my property.
Will the logs attract termites?
What about termites problem?
Are there any types of wood to look out for? Such as Oak, maple, or pine?
I do this primarily to get rid of the wood that falls from the paper bark eucalyptus trees that constantly drop limbs and branches all year....
Thank you Jacques. 😊
Hi, are seasoned logs suitable for Hugelkultur, thanks, M
I'm hoping to build a couple of raised beds this autumn/winter, and want to put wood in the bottom. But my question is: how big a concern are termites? I can't imagine that being buried under a foot or two of dirt would kill them. I don't have any wood of my own, so I was thinking I could probably check for free stuff...But I also don't want to bring pests in! For reference, im in central Texas. I just attended a compost workshop last weekend, and one of the other participants said when he stopped for free mulch, a city employee even told him there was a good chance it had termites. 😬
There are termites in the soil, so you are correct that being buried isn't going to kill them. That said, the general advice is, yes, there's a possibility that your hugelkultur bed will become a termite buffet. HOWEVER, they are part of the process of breaking down the wood, so they're beneficial that way. Just build your bed as far away from your house as possible and monitor closely for anything moving towards your house.
I love your videos! They are very informative! I have one question. I did a hugulkultur bed but now is full of red ants, big ants. 😢what should I do? I put some diometacious earth, but when i spray water or work on the bed they surface by the 100's.😢😢 I live in central Florida and the heat is craa!zy, you water and water just runs thru!😢😢 any advice will really be appreciated. ❤
That broke down surprisingly fast 👀
thanks, Jacques. I have lots of invasive Holly that I'd like to cut down and repurpose, but don't want to essentially just "plant" them in a hugel mound. Is there any danger of Holly logs sprouting under the mound? Thanks.
I’m a very beginning gardener so forgive this question but I’m curious if I can use grass clippings as part of the materials used for building the mound?
I have a bunch of eucalyptus logs that I could use for this, but would that be suitable? Doesn't eucalyptus have allopathic chemicals in it?
You know how prevalent Eucalyptus is here in San Diego!
Do you ever get termites in a hugelculture mound in SoCal?
Fun fact: „Hügel Kultur“ is German. And Hügel translates to… mound💁♂️😃
I need to figure out where to try it- thank you for the advice!
Can I use wood that had (maybe still has) termites or is that bad?
Appreciate you digging up your hugelkultur bed so we can witness what's happening. Its essentially wrecked the delicate ecosystem that's developing in there over the season. Surprised there arent' a ton of worms though.
Could I use unfinished weed compost to fill in between the logs?
I always use cardboard too! Works great!!
Do you hill more material onto it over time, since it compacted and flattened down a lot from the original height?
Thank you! Really good video for me right now.
did you ever explain the nitrogen problem?> did i miss it?
6:14 "Don't worry, we'll deal with that at the end."
I didn't see you deal with it.
So now do you have to keep adding material to the top to replant in ? Whats the upkeep like?
We'll do an update vid, but yes you can keep layering!
What if we put planner waste as the log substitute bro?
hi jacques 🤗
thanks for sharing more great info. excellent explanations and demo.
ill definitely head over to your channel for the follow-up video. tfs
Are there issues with termites?
They would be beneficial here but you can just let chickens into the area
In this case they'd be fine, but not too many no
The thing that gives me pause from trying this, is concern the fungus would get out of control. I've had problems with that before and am always seeking to have well-draining soils. I'm not completely closed minded to this technique but am wondering if anyone has any experiences using this and was fungus a concern for it?
@04:07 Great socks, Jacques! 💥💥💥
Can you plant veggies right away and not use a cover crop?
Nice wall of nasturtium behind you😊
Excellent thumbnail.
I wonder if you can grow vegetables, bushes, cucumber, pumpkin stuff like that even in a mound not just wheat.
can i use dead ATF agents instead of wood? asking for a friend ....
The tree of liberty is........well, my lawyer says I shouldn't finish that statement.
Also the fact that EG liked this post says amazing things about Epic.