I have a complicated relationship with mulch.
When we first moved here 24 years ago, I saw in mulch all the suburban ills — the false tidiness, the compulsive behavior of gardeners who seemed to have nothing better to do than spread the stuff halfway up their tree trunks.
These were days of high complaint for me. I missed the small New England village we'd just left. A place where houses sat right on the side of small lanes — and mulching, when it did occur, was done discretely out back.
Flash forward almost a quarter of a century. The small town idyll mourned and missed but ultimately abandoned. And the years that passed have not been kind to our yard. It's obvious we have used no lawn service, no chemicals, either — unless you count lime.
Mulch covers a multitude of sins. Also, of course, it keeps weeds at bay.
Now I walk past yards aromatic with the stuff, gardens darkened with the best, shredded kind. And I wish not for a mulch-free yard, just the opposite. I wish for a yard already mulched. For mulch that doesn't lie in bags in the driveway, for mulch that's already been spread.
Lo, how the mighty have fallen.