AES
Established Member
I know there are several keen and knowledgable gardeners here. I am neither of those 2 things!
The pic below shows the side of our house, at its highest level (the house is built on a slope)
About 5 years ago, when the concrete path was laid to run down to the lower levels (top of it is centre in pic) I roughly levelled the remaining area off, and after copious applications of Roundup, spread the gravel that you can see in the pic. The gravel is mainly granite chippings, and according to the bags it came in, the nominal sizes of the chips is 10 to 12 mm. The depth of the gravel laid is roughly 50 - 60 mm.
Despite the Roundup, every year since then we get quick a crop of weeds coming up through the gravel, and it's back-killing work pulling them up, AND they constantly re-appear, even if managing to get the root. "Enough is enough"!
So I was thinking of raking off the gravel back to bare earth, then using a sheet of that black plastic stuff, laying it like a fitted carpet - "Anti-weed barrier" or something it's called in out local DIY Emporium. Or even that black plastic stuff used for garden pond underlay bases? Whatever?
And then rake all the gravel back over the plastic again.
My question is this - although the gravel chips are reasonably smooth, there are of course some sharp-ish corners, and especially when moving the garden waste green bins (LH in pic - those tyres are fairly narrow, and the bins can be quite heavy) I'm wondering if over time, the weight of movements over the gravel would puncture the plastic "underlay"?
If so, should I first put a thin (10 mm?) layer of sand over the plastic, to act as a "cushion" between the gravel chips and the plastic? If not sand, what else? Or just nothing "don't bother, no problem"?
Please note that with my back problems I do NOT contemplate excavating the existing earth base below its present level/s, hence the talk of "only" 10 mm of sand/whatever.
Any advice or comment gratefully received - this is definitely NOT an area of expertise (or much interest) for me!
TIA
AES
The pic below shows the side of our house, at its highest level (the house is built on a slope)
About 5 years ago, when the concrete path was laid to run down to the lower levels (top of it is centre in pic) I roughly levelled the remaining area off, and after copious applications of Roundup, spread the gravel that you can see in the pic. The gravel is mainly granite chippings, and according to the bags it came in, the nominal sizes of the chips is 10 to 12 mm. The depth of the gravel laid is roughly 50 - 60 mm.
Despite the Roundup, every year since then we get quick a crop of weeds coming up through the gravel, and it's back-killing work pulling them up, AND they constantly re-appear, even if managing to get the root. "Enough is enough"!
So I was thinking of raking off the gravel back to bare earth, then using a sheet of that black plastic stuff, laying it like a fitted carpet - "Anti-weed barrier" or something it's called in out local DIY Emporium. Or even that black plastic stuff used for garden pond underlay bases? Whatever?
And then rake all the gravel back over the plastic again.
My question is this - although the gravel chips are reasonably smooth, there are of course some sharp-ish corners, and especially when moving the garden waste green bins (LH in pic - those tyres are fairly narrow, and the bins can be quite heavy) I'm wondering if over time, the weight of movements over the gravel would puncture the plastic "underlay"?
If so, should I first put a thin (10 mm?) layer of sand over the plastic, to act as a "cushion" between the gravel chips and the plastic? If not sand, what else? Or just nothing "don't bother, no problem"?
Please note that with my back problems I do NOT contemplate excavating the existing earth base below its present level/s, hence the talk of "only" 10 mm of sand/whatever.
Any advice or comment gratefully received - this is definitely NOT an area of expertise (or much interest) for me!
TIA
AES