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Beware of Toxic Mulch
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Mulching beds has become extremely popular these days, and mulch can be
really beneficial to your plants and the soil in your planting beds,
but there are things you need to watch for.
Here in Ohio the most popular type of mulch that people use is shredded
hardwood bark mulch, which is a byproduct of the timber industry. When
they haul the logs into the sawmill the first thing they do is debark
them. Years ago the bark was a huge problem for the mills because there
didn't seem to be a useful purpose for it, until people realized the
hidden benefits that it held. Still to this day, the bark is a headache
for the saw mills, and they don't always understand how to properly
handle it.
They like to pile it as high as they can so it takes up less space in
their yard. The mulch really tends to back up during the winter months
because there is little demand for it. In order for the mills to pile
the mulch high, they literally have to drive the large front end
loaders up onto the pile. Of course the weight of these large machines
compacts the mulch in the pile, and this can become a huge problem for
you or I if we happen to get some mulch that has been stacked too high,
and compacted too tightly.
When the trees are first debarked the mulch is fairly fresh, and needs
to decompose before we dare use it around our plants. The decomposition
process requires oxygen and air flow into the pile. When the mulch is
compacted too tight, this air flow cannot take place, and as the mulch
continues to decompose it becomes extremely hot as the organic matter
ferments. Sometimes the extreme heat combined with the inability to
release the heat can cause the pile to burst into flame through
spontaneous combustion.
In other cases the mulch heats up, cannot release the gas, and the
mulch actually becomes toxic. When this occurs the mulch develops an
overbearing odor that will take your breath away as you dig into the
pile. When you spread this toxic mulch around your plants the gas it
contains is released, and this gas can and will burn your plants.
It has happened to me twice. Once at my own house, and once on a job I
was doing for a customer. This toxic mulch is very potent. We spilled a
little mulch in the foliage of a Dwarf Alberta Spruce that we were
mulching around, and just a few minutes later brushed the mulch out of
the plant. The next day my customer noticed that one side of the plant
was all brown. The mulch had only been there for a matter of minutes.
Not only did I have to replace the Dwarf Alberta Spruce, but the mulch
also damaged at least 10 other plants that I had to replace. I once saw
where somebody ordered a truck load of mulch, had it dumped in their
driveway, and as the toxic mulch slid out of the dump truck onto the
asphalt the toxic gas that was released settled on the lawn next to the
driveway.
The gas, not the mulch, turned the grass brown next to the mulch pile.
This same person spread several yards of the mulch around their house
before they realized the problem, and it ruined many of their plants.
Now here's the hard part; trying to explain to you how to identify
toxic mulch. It has a very strong odor that will take your breath away.
But then again almost all mulch has a powerful odor. This is very
different than your typical mulch smell, but I can't explain it any
better than that.
The mulch looks perfectly normal, maybe a little darker in color than
usual. If you suspect a problem with the mulch you have, take a couple
of shovels full, and place it around an inexpensive plant. Maybe just a
couple of flowers. When doing this test use mulch from inside the mulch
pile and not from the edges. The mulch on the edge of the pile has more
than likely released most of the toxic gas that it may have held.
If after 24 hours the test plants are okay, the mulch should be fine.
The purpose of this article is not to induce panic at the mulch yard,
but toxic mulch can do serious damage. At my house it burned the leaves
right off some of the plants in my landscape, and burned the grass next
to the bed all the way around the house. It looked like somebody had
taken a torch and burned the grass back about 2” all the way
around the bed. If I hadn't seen it with my own eyes I wouldn't have
believed it.
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