posted 2 years ago
If you are trying to grow some fruit and nut trees, I would recommend that you let the encourage the weeds and not get any plastic mulch. Just chop and drop once a month, those weeds and actually doing a great job for your "food forest" in fact try and grow more weed/cover crop. Weeds add carbon to your soil, thus powerup the soil food web, they also bring up minerals, ahelp to decompact your soil, they also help with pest management so that you don't have spray your vegatables, and in the case of weeds in the legumes they also fix nitrogen for your garden.
Due to the fact that you said gardening, I am going to assume that you are not trying to grow a food forest, but instead just a regular "vegetables" garden from the usual families of cabbage/kale, spinach/beet, onion/garlic, mint/thyme, potatoes/tomatoes, squash/melon, carrot/dill, beans/peas, etc. In which case, I completely agree that weeds are a buzz kill. To me the solution is to over seed, so that there is minimal space for the weeds to grow and then harvest the vegetables as micro-greens, leaving behind only the strongest so that it can grow to maturity. I also recommend that you let 10% of your vegetables go to seed, so that your soil is filled with vegetable seeds vs with weed seeds.
If the weeds are mainly in your walkway and not in your planting area you can also try using stone mulch.
Overall I am not a big fan of putting even more plastic in the soil, if it can be helped. I do support your drip irrigation plans.
Can you share your full plans for your garden. That might help you get some ideas form other folks.
Iterations are fine, we don't have to be perfect
My 2nd Location:Florida HardinessZone:10 AHS:10 GDD:8500 Rainfall:2in/mth winter, 8in/mth summer, Soil:Sand pH8 Flat