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<blockquote data-quote="greybeard" data-source="post: 1841895" data-attributes="member: 18945"><p>A neighbor at my old place in East Texas had about 35 acres mulched on bottomland. Mostly small sweetgum, lots of yaupon, holly, thick stands of greenbrier head high, white oak saplings and a little bit of pine. (pine doesn't grow well in bottomland, hardwood choked it out)) Left the big oak trees and it looking like a carpet but sure held moisture and got boggy underneath. Really Really stunk like the dickens until 1st time the river got up and washed it all downstream somewhere. That sour smell you get from wet woodchips sometimes...</p><p>He told me what it cost per acre but I don't remember now. </p><p>I know he said he timed it to avoid sweetgum balls and yaupon balls (seed) being everywhere. Didn't seem to matter, the gum came up all over in a couple of years.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="greybeard, post: 1841895, member: 18945"] A neighbor at my old place in East Texas had about 35 acres mulched on bottomland. Mostly small sweetgum, lots of yaupon, holly, thick stands of greenbrier head high, white oak saplings and a little bit of pine. (pine doesn't grow well in bottomland, hardwood choked it out)) Left the big oak trees and it looking like a carpet but sure held moisture and got boggy underneath. Really Really stunk like the dickens until 1st time the river got up and washed it all downstream somewhere. That sour smell you get from wet woodchips sometimes... He told me what it cost per acre but I don't remember now. I know he said he timed it to avoid sweetgum balls and yaupon balls (seed) being everywhere. Didn't seem to matter, the gum came up all over in a couple of years. [/QUOTE]
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