Hello, I was wondering if someone could clear up a point of confusion for me?
This really isn't a composting question really, but it does involve pure sawdust composting in a
raised bed called a "stooling bed".
For those who don't know a stooling bed is a bed that you allow woody plants to become established in while slowly covering the base of the plant with sawdust. This covering of sawdust mimics soil and causes the plant to send out a
root system in the sawdust which is then removed after the root system forms with the new rooted pant then being planted in a proper soil mixture.
I intend to make a
apple stooling bed and I've been doing research and it seems that most stooling beds are using what appears to be fresh sawdust at least a foot thick.
I was wondering how this works? I've always read that you
should never use fresh sawdust or woodchips for any composting. It's stated that the
carbon in the sawdust robs nitrogen from the plant. Is this just another one of those things that you shouldn't do in theory, but that everyone does without any real consequence? I plan on getting the oldest sawdust that I can find and hope that it makes a difference, but maybe there is no problem in this situation?
Thank you for any input. I greatly appreciate the help.
Have a great day!