I've been wondering how
Sepp manages to get the newly established large hugelbeds to grow what he wants and not become a tremendous weeding job. In his book he describes how when building hugelbeds he carefully separates the humus layer when digging with the excavator and then places the humus layer on top of the bed. Beds are sown with seeds and germination is good because of ideal conditions. But the humus layer is normally full of weed seeds and if he doesn't use any sterilised
compost (and that would be impossible on a large scale) then how does he stop the weeds from germinating and quickly overtaking the whole bed?
Weeds have happily germinated and grown on my hugelbeds but it's not a problem as the beds are quite small, I can just remove most of them and leave some. But on large areas I don't see how it could be done. The only solution I've come up with is the one I've used in my garden when making new beds: always potatoes the first year as potatoes can grow as fast or faster than the weeds - the only crop I know of that can actually do that in our climate. Still, even the potatoes won't stop the weeds and there is always massive weeding to be done in new beds. But as potatoes get along okay I can postpone the weeding of the new beds and not have to do it in early spring when there is so much other stuff to do. But perhaps Sepp has come up with something else? As I see it the weed problem is biggest in newly established beds and the first 1-2 years after that. Later on, if one doesn't do much digging, keeps adding organic material and leaving certain more desirable (annual, low growing) weeds and removing the more problematic
perennial weeds then there is really not that much weeding to be done after a few years. The ground is then covered by useful and not overly invasive weeds.
"But if it's true that the only person over whom I have control of actions is myself, then it does matter what I do. It may not matter a jot to the world at large, but it matters to me." - John Seymour