Here I am

Salting The Earth

Attention: TDR Forum Junkies
To the point: Click this link and check out the Front Page News story(ies) where we are tracking the introduction of the 2025 Ram HD trucks.

Thanks, TDR Staff

New Recall on the dometic refrigerator

Where can I download tHis funny ringtone?

rbattelle

TDR MEMBER
I have an area beneath my deck that the former owners covered with black plastic and mulch. I want to remove the mulch and the plastic and put crushed rock down instead.



The area is shaded 100% of the time, so it only grows nasty weeds and moss. I want to prevent these from growing into my rocks.



Since I want this area to be permanently free of vegetation, my first thought was to dump a few bags of salt over the entire area. I figure this will kill all the vegetation and prevent it ever growing back.



Anyone see any problems with this idea? I have considered the possibility of runoff killing parts of my lawn, but I'm not sure how likely that is.



Ryan
 
You could try spraying the area with grass and weed killer then put black plastic down and the rock on top of that.

Just an idea.
 
Leaching into the groundwater



Is this really a problem? By the time it reaches the water table it will be so diluted as to be nearly unmeasurable.



If groundwater salinity were a real issue I figured the city wouldn't drop hundreds of thousands of tons of salt on the roadways every winter.



Ryan
 
How much room is there between the ground and the bottom of the deck? I would suggest going with a rock larger than pea gravel size. Weeds, as you have found, can root into decomposing mulch, and have a better chance of growing in crushed rock than in larger rock. The larger rock should also hold less water, which should help hold off the moss. I am sure you know this but try to grade it so the water drains off rather than collects under the rock. I would use Round Up, then cover it, then use the rocks. That would rock! :)
 
How much room is there between the ground and the bottom of the deck? I would suggest going with a rock larger than pea gravel size. Weeds, as you have found, can root into decomposing mulch, and have a better chance of growing in crushed rock than in larger rock. The larger rock should also hold less water, which should help hold off the moss. I am sure you know this but try to grade it so the water drains off rather than collects under the rock. I would use Round Up, then cover it, then use the rocks. That would rock! :)



I plan to use #2 limestone rocks, which are roughly fist-sized. I do plan to do some grading, and the soil is almost entirely clay, so that should help water run away from the house. I hope.



Ryan
 
I am not a landscaper or anything like that, what I said about the salt was just my opinion.



Salt on the roads is applied to asphault and hopefully the runoff goes in the storm drain. However, now that I think of it, the roads get salted and the weeds grow out from the curb in the spring, don't they? :-laf
 
Back
Top