The Secret to Weed-Free Gravel Garden Pathways

For years I have felt like I was pulling the same weeds over and over again in the exact same locations, in my garden pathways. Rye grass, crab grass, goldenrod. I would pull weeds for hours and two days later they’d be back.
I used high-quality landscaping fabric and gravel in my pathways-and it was stunning and weed-free for a couple of months. Then it became a nightmare to keep weed-free. It was during a random conversation with a family member that I discovered the problem… landscaping fabric. I pulled it up and waited a month before creating and sharing this video to make sure this really worked. And it’s been a complete game-changer.
So if landscaping fabric is a no-go, what to use in the future? I’ll be sticking with heavy-sheet-mulching with cardboard, compost and soil. This approach hasn’t steered me wrong yet in creating growing spaces. In the future, I’ll do the same on walkways, personally.
////////////
My Books:
The Sustainable Homestead: a.co/d/aJiktEc
The Little Homesteader, Spring: a.co/d/81clkYB
The Little Homesteader, Summer: a.co/d/81clkYB
The Little Homesteader, Fall: a.co/d/4NVXWcO
The Little Homesteader, Winter: a.co/d/hpQ8x7s
The Harvest Table Cookbook: a.co/d/00rW3uq
/////////////
Welcome to Axe & Root Homestead! I'm a first generation, self-taught permaculture farmer in Central New Jersey. If you're looking for information on gardening, homesteading, canning, animal care, working with your land, or regenerative farming practices, I have lots of info to share:
Instagram: / axeandroothomestead
Blog: www.axeandroothomestead.com/blog
Podcast: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast...
////////////
ONLINE CLASSES
Beginner Beekeeping:
axeandroothomestead.thinkific...
All Natural Soapmaking for Beginners:
axeandroothomestead.thinkific...
Learn to Grow Food in Less Than an Hour:
axeandroothomestead.thinkific...
Make Your Own Maple Syrup:
axeandroothomestead.thinkific...
////////////
FREE RESOURCES:
Chickens vs Ducks Free Printable:
www.axeandroothomestead.com/s...
Sheep vs Goats Free Printable:
www.axeandroothomestead.com/s...
Plant Profile Gardening Record:
www.axeandroothomestead.com/s...
#clydesdale #drafthorse #farmingwithhorses #ploughhorse #homestead #homesteading #homegrown #growyourown #gyo #garden #vegetablegarden #vegetablegardening #natural

Пікірлер: 39

  • @GDSavingThePast
    @GDSavingThePastАй бұрын

    Something you may want to try in the future on your gravel paths is to put down a 2 to 3 inch compacted layer of decomposed granite and then top that with your pea gravel. Best thing I ever did on one of my paths.

  • @d.r.7943
    @d.r.79432 ай бұрын

    I am European and in the old days all the Castles and Cottage gardens had gravel paths and drives! The key to weed free is periodic raking. It dislodges weed seedlings In the old days they hand raked small areas and the long driveways were maintained by pulling large rakes with horses. No landscape fabrics! I hand rake my small areas with small gravel and my large long driveway I rake with my lawn tractor. I built a rake device with 2x4s and landscape nails for a rake that i drag behind. Mine has a board with a lip on top in the back where I line up solid concrete blocks for weight and bungy them on because my driveway has larger rocks so they don't get stuck in tires. It requires weight so the rake doesn't just pop around on top.The raking also takes care of any ruts made by cars. If I should get the occasional weed I either pull or spray it but the more you rake the more weed free you stay as you got to dislodge seedlings while they are small and can root all the way down to soil or cover them up with gravel and take away the light. Raking gravel is still less work then mowing a lawn every week.

  • @AxeAndRootHomestead

    @AxeAndRootHomestead

    2 ай бұрын

    This is great information and your invention sounds amazing! How often do you rake? I have seen the incredible hoggin paths and drives on old European properties and saw that’s it’s a blend of clay, sand, and stone I think? I couldn’t find anything similar here in the states. I would love to find a “recipe” and make my own!

  • @d.r.7943

    @d.r.7943

    2 ай бұрын

    @@AxeAndRootHomestead I am not a fan of hoggin paths that are mainly used in England. I find that they generate way too much dust. In England maybe not so much with all their rainy days. LOL My rake is not my invention as gravel rakes and gravel drags can be purchased. Many are made for larger tractors and used to maintain farm gravel roads. They are a bit pricey for me so I made mine. I also can disassemble mine and store it in my garden shed. I rake about once a week in spring for summer weeds and autumn for winter weeds. Every 2-3 weeks in summer or when I see small weeds anywhere that are too many to pull or spray. It all depends on your property and what is around. If you got a neighbor that let's his weeds grow more then you too will have more weeds. Spring and Autumn are the times when weeds go to seed most. I get a beverage and music and just cruise around my paths and drives To me it's a fun activity.LOL

  • @CharmsMaster
    @CharmsMaster Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for sharing this! Definitely something to think about.

  • @williamphillips777
    @williamphillips7774 ай бұрын

    Oh wow! I literally just unrolled some and was taking lunch break and watched this. This makes total sense and i was even considering concrete and poly sand or something....Im taking the fabric up right now! Thanks for this...might of saved me years of struggle 😂.

  • @shaunsshelf
    @shaunsshelf Жыл бұрын

    I think you just saved me so much money, thank you!

  • @AxeAndRootHomestead

    @AxeAndRootHomestead

    Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for watching!

  • @need4HIM
    @need4HIMАй бұрын

    I agree with what you said about landscaping fabric. I made the same discovery in my mulch bed. Last year, I shoved aside all the mulch (it was tedious) and laid down cardboard which I salvaged from my Amazon and grocery deliveries. Actually I did not pull up all the landscaping fabric, because I had used numerous staples to hold it down. But I did pull up quite a bit. I just laid the cardboard on top of it, (carefull to overlap the cardboard pieces). The cardboard did smother a lot of weeds.I was weed free!! In fact it prevented almost 100% of the weeds from growing back. I have a few problems with grass in my mulch and rock bed still, because my landscapers blow cut grass into those areas. But the cardboard does work fine otherwise. Now I have to do something with my lawncutting service...lol.

  • @louisvl10
    @louisvl1010 ай бұрын

    working on a garden where the previous owner laid that fabric but never laid gravel. i can confirm this is hell to fix now. 10 years without maintenance, got all sorts of bushes with roots in the fabric making it so much harder to pull out. i think im gonna rip all that fabric out and try like you say. been trying to save the fabric but by removing the stumps it's full of holes anyway now.

  • @AxeAndRootHomestead

    @AxeAndRootHomestead

    10 ай бұрын

    Ugh. Good luck to you!

  • @robertspitzner8060
    @robertspitzner8060 Жыл бұрын

    Awesome video! That fabric eventually needs to be replaced and is a mess to clean up. I cringe when I see so many homesteaders give up on mulches and weeding to use this stuff.

  • @AxeAndRootHomestead

    @AxeAndRootHomestead

    Жыл бұрын

    I totally agree!

  • @bdBSF
    @bdBSF2 ай бұрын

    Thank you, thank you thank you… I had heard a few people talk about not using landscape fabric, but no one explained why… This makes a lot of sense to me! And I do have several beds where the weeds are just entrenched through landscape fabric. Ugh. Dreading this job.

  • @AxeAndRootHomestead

    @AxeAndRootHomestead

    2 ай бұрын

    Glad it was helpful! I know some folks love it but I think those roots in that fabric speak for themselves! You can do it! 💪🏼

  • @mbpblue
    @mbpblue15 күн бұрын

    Great advise. Thank you

  • @AxeAndRootHomestead

    @AxeAndRootHomestead

    11 күн бұрын

    Thanks for watching!

  • @thenextpoetician6328
    @thenextpoetician6328Ай бұрын

    In time, the neighbor will see the same problem. He's using cedar bark. The hedge went in last summer. It's already going downhill. I use a mix of bark and rotting wood scraps, sawdust, and chop and drop. I generally keep weeds to a dull roar, and they compost in place, except quack grass.

  • @danflensborg1504
    @danflensborg15043 ай бұрын

    ❤Hi, and thank you so much for this lovely video 🙏 I am going to dig down and find out, what is beneath our grabble 😉👍 Best regards from Ebeltoft, Denmark / Dan

  • @AxeAndRootHomestead

    @AxeAndRootHomestead

    3 ай бұрын

    You’re welcome 😊

  • @sunnybizz4857
    @sunnybizz4857Ай бұрын

    I pulled up my fabric years ago and found quack grass roots weaving itself into the fibers. It's impossible to pull out. I'm converting to a 3 inch deep cover of wood chips

  • @wwtv361
    @wwtv361Ай бұрын

    Without some kind of barrier, the gravel eventually works its way into our clay soil -- even harder to deal with than weeds.

  • @AxeAndRootHomestead

    @AxeAndRootHomestead

    Ай бұрын

    I’ve got clay as well! This route has been working much better for me. 😊

  • @georgannedermigny5992
    @georgannedermigny5992Ай бұрын

    will this help with tubers ?

  • @mrsmalkin28
    @mrsmalkin285 ай бұрын

    So you pulled up the fabric, then added layers of cardboard, compost, and soil, then put the pea gravel back on? Trying to figure out exactly what I need to do if I go through the effort of pushing our gravel and pulling up the fabric. Thank you!!

  • @AxeAndRootHomestead

    @AxeAndRootHomestead

    5 ай бұрын

    Hi! I would definitely do cardboard then compost for filling a raised bed. For walkways though, I just pulled the fabric back and pushed the gravel back on top of the packed down soil. The soil is so packed down (and I have clay between the beds) that it makes a firm substrate for the gravel. I think we often forget most weeds are wind-spread and down from the top, not underneath (unless there’s a plant with runners or tubers). I hope that helps a bit!

  • @nageldev
    @nageldev6 ай бұрын

    But... you didn't actually tell us any "secret" to weed-free gravel pathways. Getting rid of fabric may stop build-up underneath like you encountered, but without it, you're going to be forever fighting growth coming through. Instead of weeding once a month, you'll be weeding daily.

  • @besteva5651
    @besteva56514 ай бұрын

    So what did you put down, just the rocks?😊

  • @coreyfrench7826

    @coreyfrench7826

    3 ай бұрын

    Im curious as well because she listed cardboard and mulch and i want to know the order. Because im laying pavers. So i might try spraying weed repellent, lay card board then pavers, and mulch it but then i dunno what to do with the 4 bags of large gravel i got

  • @MsCaterific
    @MsCaterific Жыл бұрын

    Interesting 🤔

  • @Dominolly
    @Dominolly3 ай бұрын

    I've just recently reclaimed a small wild patch of garden for a greenhouse and produce area. The home's previous owners had put down the landscape fabric and I can confirm that it is EVIL! It had a whole network of weeds growing through it and on top of it where compost had naturally formed. It was very hard to pull up, there are still ribbons of "cassette tape" running through the soil. Awful stuff.

  • @AxeAndRootHomestead

    @AxeAndRootHomestead

    3 ай бұрын

    Thank you for watching! Yeah I think a lightbulb moment for me happened, unfortunately, after the fabric had already been in place for a long time and I was pulling the exact same weeds in the same locations over and over again. The only way to extract the root was to cut a hole in the fabric to remove it entirely. Then when my father in law told me his perspective, it confirmed it for me.

  • @rickm5853
    @rickm5853Ай бұрын

    round up

  • @connorflanagan9329
    @connorflanagan93292 ай бұрын

    What you need is weed mat and not fabric. Weed mat is made from ploypropylene.

  • @pamschaw3842
    @pamschaw3842 Жыл бұрын

    My family thinks I'm nuts for refusing to put down landscaping fabric in my new garden paths. I hate it so much and have always suspected it was doing more harm than good. I feel so vindicated! 😂

  • @AxeAndRootHomestead

    @AxeAndRootHomestead

    Жыл бұрын

    Haha! I’m glad! Your suspicions are valid 🤣

  • @Vananh-rp9xv
    @Vananh-rp9xv21 күн бұрын

    No fabric gravel makes me weed every spring like crazy. Buy thick fabric make it less .

  • @GB-yx7go
    @GB-yx7goАй бұрын

    Use plastic

  • @javier0304
    @javier03043 ай бұрын

    I believe you used the wrong fabric. The stuff they sell at big box stores are garbage. You have to get landscape woven fabric. There’s some that can last for like 10 years. The one I use is made by Dewitt. It’s the 3.2 oz fabric. They make stronger commercial 5.0 oz fabric but it cost more money.