I am planning on experimenting with hugelkulture in the coming season, but don't have access to very many large logs. On the other hand, I have 10 yards of mulch that just got delivered, and I'm not sure exactly what I'm going to do with all of it. After applying it to my entire front
yard, and since I only have a few woody plants in the back right now that will need mulching (although I am hoping to change that once I've built up the fertility), the only other uses I can think of are for footpaths and for the veggie beds, although from a soil microbiological point of view, I know most annual veggies prefer bacterial domination in the soil, which means that they prefer cellulose (
straw, leaves,
newspaper) rather than lignin (
wood chips) as a mulch, so I'd prefer not to use it there.
However, I was wondering if I could just use the mulch as the base of a sheet mulched bed, sort of like a hybrid of sheet mulching and hugelkulture. Maybe even mixing the wood with high N material like seaweed or manure or veggie scraps. Do you think this would work out ok? My main concern is since we have such sandy soil, I'd like to keep the beds as
water retaining as possible, and hugelkulture could definitely achieve this for us, but like I said, I'd like to use what's readily available. From a logical perspective, this seems like it would work out just fine, if not better than traditional hugelkulture, since it incorporates sheet mulching as well, which leads to rapid soil creation, and counteracts the effects of nitrogen leach so common in
hugel beds.
So, any tips or thoughts on this idea? Will it work, or are large logs of wood required for a truly effective hugelkulture bed?