Hügelkultur: Creating the Perfect Soil for Your Garden Bed

By:Kate Morgan|
hugelkultur
This almost-completed hügelkultur bed has been laid into a trench filled with garden debris, old branches and other rotting material.Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 2.0)

If you're building a garden, you may have realized that the average bed requires alotof soil. Luckily, there are a lot of different ways to build up a planting area, and hügelkultur may just be right for you.

Hügelkultur, pronouncedHYOO-gle-culture,is a German word meaning "hill culture." It's a gardening method that's hundreds of years old, but was first widelywritten about在1960年代。它使用木质碎片超过compostand soil to create mounds that retain moisture and supply plants with nutrients. Read on to find out if hügelkultur is right for yourgarden, and learn how to get started.

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How Is a Hügelkultur Bed Made?

The foundation of ahügelkultur bed, or mound, is decaying wood. It starts with a pile of branches and logs, and even raw lumber — meaning not pressure-treated wood, which canleach chemicalsinto your soil. It should be piled as high as 5 or 6 feet (1.5 or 1.8 meters), and topped with grass clippings and any green, nitrogen-rich compost material, followed by a thick layer of topsoil and topped off with mulch.

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What Are the Benefits of Hügelkultur?

Essentially, what you're building is a compost pile that'll decompose in place. As it does, it becomes a nutrient-dense, spongy bed that feeds plants, remains drought-resistant and can even extend the growing season in your garden, thanks to the heat generated by the decomposition process.

Because the base of the mound is a pile of branches and brush, it also means you can build a garden bed large enough to accommodate a lot of plants while using very little soil. That makes hügelkultur an economical choice for many growers.

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Once a hügelkultur bed is established, it'll last for a number of years, and the growing medium will actually improve from season to season. It's a self-sustaining method that requires little upkeep and can drastically increase a garden's yield.

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To create a hügelkultur bed, spread wood chips, garden clippings and compost over a bed of logs, cover it with soil and allow the natural breakdown to begin.
elmxmle/Shutterstock

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What Are the Steps to Creating a Hügel Mound?

Step 1. Choose Your Location

First, decide where to build your mound. Look for an area that gets sun for most of the day. If there's a slope nearby, situate your hügel mound perpendicular to it, so as to catch as much rain runoff as possible. A site at least 8 feet (2.4 meters) long by 4 feet (1.2 meters) wide is ideal; you want to give the hügel a wide base to prevent collapse.

Step 2. Create a Clean Base

Once you've chosen the spot, clear it of grass and weeds. Just piling the brush on top likely won't be enough to prevent weed re-growth, so make sure you smother any existing foliage with cardboard or newspaper.

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Making a hügelkultur raised bed is simple — as the logs, old vegetation and garden debris break down, they will become more compact.
Jasmine Sahin/Shutterstock

Step 3. Dig Your Pit and Begin to Fill It

Once the soil is clear, dig down about a foot (0.3 meters), setting aside the topsoil to use later. In the pit, start to pile logs, branches, twigs and other wood, keeping the pile as tight as possible. It'srecommendedyou use a mix of softwoods — think pine, fir, cypress and other conifers — and hardwoods like maple and oak. Try to limit the use of woods like cedar and redwood, which take a long time to break down. Avoid pressure-treated or painted lumber, which can leach toxins into the garden and its plants; be cautious about using black walnut wood for the same reason.

Step 4. Create Alternating Layers of Material

Once the mound grows to a few feet, start to layer in soil and compost such as grass clippings and straw. Keep alternating with layers of wood until the mound is close to the desired height; that might be anywhere from 2 to 6 feet (0.6 to 1.8 meters) tall, but keep in mind that it will shrink considerably as the wood composts.

Top it off with a final layer of soil and then cover the whole thing in mulch. Finally, water it well, and keep it very moist for at least the first few weeks.

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When Should I Build a Hügel Mound?

The ideal time to start a mound is in the fall. Over the winter, the decomposition process begins and creates good planting conditions when the weather warms. But that doesn't mean you can't jump into hügelkultur in the spring. It's never too early to start a hügel mound, planting on top of it as it decomposes underground. The wood will eat upnitrogenas it begins to rot, but you can help maintain the health of your mound by planting nitrogen-fixing plants like beans and peas during the first year.

Once your hügel is a season old, the wood inside will have begun to break down, and the mound will be like a big sponge, ready for diverse plants. The base of the mound will be consistently more moist than the top, so it's wise to plant more drought-tolerant varieties at the peak of the mound, and those that need more water further down its slope.

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Will Hügelkultur Work in My Garden?

There are few drawbacks to growing in a hügel mound.

Wood and termites go hand in hand, but termites look for dead wood to infest and don't like to compete in moist green zones. A hügelkultur bed is made of rotting vegetation and contains lots of worms and bugs and bacteria, so, though it may attract some termites, they won't thrive and can actually bebeneficialby working to decompose the organic matter. But if you live in an area where termites are a major concern, you will want to保持床at least 30 feet (9 meters) from your home.

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As long as you have an outdoor space and access to some woody material, hügelkultur should work for you. And once it's established, a hügelkultur garden will remain productive and easy to take care of for many years to come.

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