8 Essential Tips for Mulching with Straw in Your Vegetable Garden (2024)

  • Gardening
  • Caring for Your Yard

Help your veggie plants thrive, even through heat and drought, by using straw mulch correctly.

By

Rita Pelczar

8 Essential Tips for Mulching with Straw in Your Vegetable Garden (1)

Rita Pelczar is a lifelong gardener and experienced horticulturist. She shares her enthusiasm for growing plants and environmentally responsible practices through teaching, coaching, and extensive writing. She has worked in the field for over 40 years, and has been writing for 30 years.

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Updated on September 7, 2023

In your vegetable garden, mulching with straw will give you a long list of benefits. For starters, straw is inexpensive, easy to work with, and good for your soil. And a layer of straw mulch between your veggie rows sets off your plants and makes your garden look neat and tidy. Although it takes a little effort up front, mulching with straw will save you time in the long run when it comes to weeding and watering. Unless you garden on a massive scale, one or two bales is usually all you'll need to mulch your entire vegetable patch. Here's what you need to know about using straw mulch around your edible plants.

8 Essential Tips for Mulching with Straw in Your Vegetable Garden (2)

What is straw?

Straw is the dried stems left after wheat or oats (or other grains) have been harvested. Once the grain is removed, the dried stalks are bundled into bales. Ideally there will be very few seeds or weeds in the straw bale. (Pine straw is simply baled pine needles and is a good option for mulching ornamental beds.)

Benefits of Mulching with Straw

Straw mulch not only suppresses weed growth, but moderates fluctuations in soil temperature and moisture. "A good covering of straw mulch will keep plants cooler, minimizing stress in the hotter parts of the day," says North Carolina Horticulture Extension Agent Gene Fox. And because the straw reduces evaporation from the soil surface, you won't need to water as often. Keeping the soil more evenly moist has many benefits. "Regulating moisture throughout the day is key in preventing physiological problems such as fruit cracking and even blossom end-rot in tomatoes," says Fox.

A good layer of straw mulch helps prevent diseases that are frequently spread by splashing rain. "As the rain droplets pelt the bare soil, particles are blasted into the air and often land on the underside of leaves, spreading bacterial and fungal diseases. Organic mulch [such as straw] will dissipate the velocity of the rain droplets minimizing the soil splashing, which prevents quite a bit of disease transmission in garden plants," says Fox.

How to Choose the Best Type of Mulch for Your Landscape

Developing melons, pumpkins, and squash stay cleaner when they rest on a bed of straw mulch. It's great for strawberries as well. "Some of my best strawberry patches are with a straw mulch between rows," says Beth Chisholm, Whatcom County Community Garden Coordinator with the Washington State University Extension Service. "Just watch for slugs," she adds.

8 Essential Tips for Mulching with Straw in Your Vegetable Garden (3)

Tips for Using Straw Mulch in Your Vegetable Garden

While straw makes an excellent mulch for your vegetable garden, there are a few things to know about getting the most out of this type of mulch. Use these tips when mulching with straw to help your vegetable plants thrive.

  1. Use clean straw—not hay! Although they may look similar, straw and hay are different in one important feature: Hay, which is grown to feed animals, contains seeds. If used as mulch, these seeds germinate and create a weed problem. A good quality straw contains few seeds. When purchasing straw, examine the bale for weeds—weedy straw will also sow weeds into the garden—exactly what you don't want. It's worth asking around to find a reliable source of quality straw; a local farmer, nursery, or garden center can usually help you out.
  2. Apply a source of nitrogen to the soil before planting. As straw breaks down, it may temporarily rob the soil of nitrogen. This is easily avoided by adding compost, well-rotted manure, worm castings, or a balanced organic fertilizer to the soil prior to planting and mulching.
  3. Don't lay the mulch until your vegetables have been growing for a few weeks. Applying mulch over newly planted seeds may prevent their germination. Chisolm suggests an exception to this rule: "When seeding peas or beans, straw is a great way to protect the planting from birds robbing those newly planted seed." But just use a light layer of straw until the peas or beans are up and growing.
  4. Weed your garden before you apply your mulch. While mulch will prevent most new weed seeds from germinating, it's important to remove existing weeds before spreading your straw. "Most annual weeds require sunlight to trigger germination. By preventing the sunlight from reaching the soil surface, we can cut out nearly all of our annual weeds that plague us in the garden," says Fox.
  5. Apply the straw at least four to eight inches deep. Though this sounds like a lot, the straw will compress quickly, and to get maximum benefit from the mulch, you need good coverage. This insulating layer will promote beneficial microbes that help build soil. It also helps prevent erosion.
  6. Don't mulch right up to the plant stem. Cover the space between rows thoroughly, but not right up to the plant stems, which can encourage fungal diseases to take hold. A good rule of thumb is to leave one to three inches of space around plant stems to provide good air circulation and avoid rots.
  7. Add more straw if needed during the growing season. Because straw breaks down quickly, you should check it about halfway through the growing season and add additional straw if needed to maintain good coverage. An adequately thick layer of mulch is particularly important during the heat of summer.
  8. Use the straw to build your soil. At the end of the growing season, straw mulch helps improve your garden soil. Fox explains, "Because it breaks down so rapidly, the straw can be turned into the soil through tillage to help fuel microbial activity. The entire process makes soils healthier and more able to produce and hold nutrients that our plants need to grow."

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8 Essential Tips for Mulching with Straw in Your Vegetable Garden (2024)

FAQs

8 Essential Tips for Mulching with Straw in Your Vegetable Garden? ›

Buy a bale of straw and spread three, four or five inches deep about four to five feet around your tomatoes. When you pop open the bail of straw, you will notice three, four or five inch thick sheets easily break off the bail. Lay these thick sheets around the plants as you see in the picture above.

Can you use straw for mulch on tomato plants? ›

Buy a bale of straw and spread three, four or five inches deep about four to five feet around your tomatoes. When you pop open the bail of straw, you will notice three, four or five inch thick sheets easily break off the bail. Lay these thick sheets around the plants as you see in the picture above.

Will vegetable seeds grow through straw mulch? ›

While it's incredibly beneficial, tiny vegetable seeds may struggle to grow through a thick layer of mulch. It's often better to wait until seedlings have emerged and established before applying mulch around them. – **Vegetable Seeds and Straw**: Similar to mulch, straw can be a challenge for smaller seeds.

How do you use straw to prevent weeds in the garden? ›

Most gardeners who use straw mulch used it for controlling weeds. With a deep enough application of straw most weeds can be prevented from growing. If you plan to use straw as your sole weed control, use at least six inches of fluffed up straw. That is enough to inhibit most common garden weeds.

What is a major downside to mulching? ›

Disadvantages of Mulching

Excessive mulch that is a layer more than 3 inches deep can suffocate and bury plants. In this case, oxygen and water are unable to reach the roots. A layer of 2 to 3 inches of mulch is enough.

What do you put on the ground before mulching? ›

Again, you can use a garden hoe or hand weeder or follow the instructions for using a weed killer. If you're mulching around a tree, you can remove the grass or simply put down a layer of black-and-white newspaper, thoroughly water it down and then cover it with your mulch. Add mulch to a depth of 2 to 4 inches.

What vegetables like straw mulch? ›

Organic mulch [such as straw] will dissipate the velocity of the rain droplets minimizing the soil splashing, which prevents quite a bit of disease transmission in garden plants," says Fox. Developing melons, pumpkins, and squash stay cleaner when they rest on a bed of straw mulch. It's great for strawberries as well.

Is straw a good mulch for cucumbers? ›

Fruiting Plants – plants like tomatoes, melons, strawberries and cucumbers will especially benefit as the straw will protect the fruit from sitting directly on the soil.

What is the best thing to put around tomato plants? ›

Grass Clippings: If you mow your lawn, you'll most likely have grass clippings. Spread evenly around the stalks of your plants, grass clippings mat together to protect plants and retain heat. Keep grass clippings a little ways away from the stems of tomatoes so that water has access to the roots.

How many tomato plants per straw bale? ›

Each bale can be planted with the following number of vegetable plants: Tomatoes: 2 to 3 plants per bale. Peppers: 4 plants per bale.

How to chop up straw for mulch? ›

Open up your straw bale, and shake loose a few big handfuls on your freshly mown area. Using the lawnmower, ride over the straw — you may have to lift up on the rear wheels and lower it down onto the straw to get it started — go slowly as you progress! Empty your freshly chopped straw of out the collection bag… viola!

Why is my straw sprouting? ›

Seed of grain in bales of straw can be a result of it not being harvested properly. Or perhaps the grain head on the harvest machine was not set right. Another reason can be the use of older combines that leave grain in the field that are then picked up by the baler (machine) collecting the straw.

How to lay straw in a garden? ›

Spread the straw garden mulch generously (3”-4”) over new seeding beds or around plants in your vegetable garden as a protective layer from heavy rain, wind, and scouring.

How much straw to mulch a 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.

Should I remove straw from garden? ›

Remove straw in the spring when the soil temperature reaches 40°F and the first new leaves begin growing. Delaying mulch removal too long will delay harvest and decrease yield. However, removing it too early increases the risk of freeze and frost damage.

What is the problem with mulching? ›

Over-mulching can create an anaerobic (low or no oxygen) environment that allows fungal diseases to develop in plant stems and roots (some are toxic to humans). Mulching at the too early in the spring can create water logged soils that may kill drought tolerant plants.

Should you water right after mulching? ›

You should spread your mulch to be two to four inches thick. If your mulch is too thin, then weeds can push through. If your mulch is too thick, it prevents water from reaching the soil. Water after mulching — This is an optional step, but a final watering can help settle the mulch into place.

What safety precautions should be taken when mulching? ›

SAFETY PRECAUTIONS: The mulch is best handled with a pitchfork and spread with a solid metal rake. As with all mulch, care must be taken to avoid splinters. Also, due to the recycled nature of the mulch there may be small amounts of unwanted material such as shredded rubbish.

Why is mulch killing my plants? ›

Excessive mulch reduces soil oxygen for roots, suffocating them and causing them to die. Roots in search of oxygen and water sometimes grow into excess mulch. During dry periods the mulch dries out and the roots in the mulch die.

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