Newspapers and cardboard with a few inches of mulch on top are used as seed barriers in my daylily gardens. Either medium has kept gardens weedfree for a year and not too bad on the first half of the second year. Then it needs to be weeded and done again.The cardboard did tend to have rodent trails under it whereas the newspapers did not. The newspapers are water soaked before putting them down and the paper tended to conform to the soil unevenness whereas the cardboard did not. Both mediums helped hold moisture and both protected the soil from the scorching sun.
I have been using cardboard for years. It's free and I'm cheap. It needs replaced every other year because I only use a single layer. I like the idea of using multiple layers! I may have to try that!
I've used the black weed fabric with much on top , can't say I've noticed any cons. I'm just looking for a cheaper alternative....Not that I have as many trees as some of you'all...I probably only 25 pears and Crabs to take care of.I put 3' x 3' black weed fabric down. It does heat up soil but my understanding it will also produce condensation under the mat as evening temps cool.
Pros cons with this approach?
I've used the black weed fabric with much on top , can't say I've noticed any cons. I'm just looking for a cheaper alternative....Not that I have as many trees as some of you'all...I probably only 25 pears and Crabs to take care of.
^^^ I have done the same but will caution against going too small in cage diameter with concrete remesh. Had some of my caging down to 2 ft maybe a little less and found leaders clipped off on new plantings from the younger deer able to stick most of their head thru that 6" opening. Using smaller diameter cages with the 2" x 4" fencing seems to work ok however. With the remesh thinking gotta stay 3 to 3-1/2 ft dia anyway.