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Using straw as mulch in the garden saves money, crops, and sanity. (Note: Straw is not hay.) See the many benefits of mulching with straw bales in the vegetable garden.
No, I’m not Rumpelstiltskin, the cranky gnome in a Grimm fairy tale; I can’t spin straw into gold. But straw bales are inexpensive gold for gardens. I only pay $7 a bale, and the straw saves me hours of weeding, watering, and worrying. I get it from a farmer nearby. Numerous garden centers stock straw, too. Bales are huge; one will usually cover the garden. Just be sure that you are buying straw, not hay.
Everything in the vegetable garden is mulched with a 6-inch layer, including blueberries, Alpine strawberries, and cranberries. I use a foot or two of straw atop the potato bed to grow clean potatoes that can be easily harvested. Tubers form in the straw, and crops are always bigger when I use the straw mulch.
First, let me explain that straw is not hay. You don’t want to use hay, as it will cause nightmares and plenty of weed pulling. Hay is a grass that is primarily grown and cut for livestock. It is difficult to cut hay without at least some of the grass going to seed.
According to the University of Maryland Extension Service, “Straws are the dry hollow hay stalks remaining after cereal crops such as wheat or barley have been harvested. They contain few or no seed heads, especially when compared to hay”. Straw stalks don’t compact or mat. They’re also slow to decompose and don’t tie up nitrogen or other nutrients in the soil, making the perfect mulch.
Potato plants are grown in wooden beds and mulched with straw to protect against weeds and retain moisture. Photo: OlgaSolo
The Benefits of Straw Mulch
1. Straw Lets You Water Less Often
A thick blanket of straw keeps the moisture in the soil, radically slowing evaporation. Watering the garden once a week will be the norm rather than every day or two. They dry out a lot slower in hot, sunny weather.
If you live in an area of the country experiencing a rainfall shortage or drought, straw mulch is gold! I do. We’ve received only a tenth of normal rainfall and had a huge snow shortage last winter. The ground is so dry that it’s cracking in spots. But despite high temperatures and a lack of rain, I water the vegetable garden only once a week.
2. Straw Mulch Reduces Weeds
Straw blocks out the sun, preventing most weeds from germinating and growing. First, remove the weeds from your garden bed. Then, lay down the straw immediately.
If you’ve already seeded your vegetables, don’t lay straw on top of the seeds or seedlings. But everywhere else, there is exposed ground; lay down a nice thick layer of straw
It will not only keep weeds from growing but also keep the soil moist, soft, and workable.
Mulching around tomatoes can protect against blight, blossom-end rot, and more. Photo: Volodymyr Nikitenko
3. Straw Mulch Reduces Pests and Diseases
Straw also saves crops like tomatoes, peppers, and squash from developing blossom-end rot and cat-facing, blueberries from shriveling, and sweet peppers from turning hot.
Soil moisture stays even, and calcium can be transferred from the soil to tomatoes easily, preventing diseases.
Straw mulch at the base of tomato and pepper plants also prevents the transfer of soil-borne diseases such as early blight to plant leaves. No water splashes up from the soil to the leaves because the straw absorbs it.
A thick straw mulch also fosters the growth of large pumpkins, winter squash, and watermelons. The mulch provides a clean blanket upon which melons and pumpkins can grow unblemished.
4. Straw Mulch Increases Nutrients in the Soil
Straw decomposes like any other organic material, but it’s much slower. As straw rots, it releases nutrients, feeding the plants growing in it. Straw actually makes your garden better. Genius, right?
Have you used straw for mulch? What other materials do you use to hold moisture in and prevent diseases?
Doreen Howard, an award-winning author, is the former garden editor at Woman’s Day. She has gardened in every climate zone from California to Texas to Oklahoma to the Midwest. She’s especially fond of...
Do you till the straw in after the harvest or do you remove it?
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<a title="View user profile." href="/author/editors">The Editors</a>Tue, 06/26/2012 - 14:44
If you leave it, it will turn into mulch!
Thank you for your interest in the Old Farmer's Almanac and our Web site.
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<span>Doreen G. Howard</span>Tue, 06/26/2012 - 14:34
Straw will rot slightly over the winter, and you can use it again for mulch, adding more to maintain a six-inch or so layer of mulch. Straw doesn't add any nutrients to the soil, but it can be used to break up clay.
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<span>Zaismas</span>Tue, 06/26/2012 - 10:29
Can I use the straw at the base of my grape vines? They are drip fed so will the straw interfere with that? I live in drought-ridden TX just north of San Antonio. I'm in Zone 8b. Thanks!
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<a title="View user profile." href="/author/editors">The Editors</a>Tue, 06/26/2012 - 11:18
As long as the soil is receiving enough water then it should be OK.
Straw helps keep moisture in the soil which slows down evaporation. Very helpful during times of drought!
Thank you for your interest in the Old Farmer's Almanac and our Web site.
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<span>Karlene</span>Mon, 06/18/2012 - 23:15
Where can i find more information on growing potatoes in staw? Also will sweet potatoesgrow that way too?
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<span>Coop Bob</span>Tue, 06/26/2012 - 12:23
I make a furrow just like I was planting the seed potatoes in the ground, I cover with about a foot of straw. as the plants grow I cover with another 6 inches of straw. They are a lot easier to dig and the potatoes are really clean.
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<span>Doreen G. Howard</span>Tue, 06/19/2012 - 17:11
Sweet potatoes and yams are a different botanical family from potatoes. You can mulch their beds with straw to preserve moisture, but plant stems will not produce in a thick straw layer.
Where is your garden located? I live in upstate NY and am concerned about attractign slugs and beetles with the straw.
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<span>Doreen G. Howard</span>Mon, 06/18/2012 - 16:25
I live along the Wisconsin border, 90 miles northwest of Chicago in Zone 5. Any mulch is going to draw slugs and beetles. Use barriers or sprinkle or spray plants with Dipel, an organic control for chewing pests. It freezes their stomaches.
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