
Lava Rock Landscaping Ideas
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This past summer, we decided we would begin the task working on one bed at a time. We enlisted the help of the children to make the task go faster.
First, we cut a piece of hardware cloth measuring about 30 inches by 30 inches (openings about 1/4 - 1/2 inch). Then, as we dug out the embedded lava rocks (which pulled up a lot of soil with them), we piled both the soil and the lava rocks on top of the hardware cloth.
Then, working in small sections of the garden bed, and using the hardware cloth as a sieve, we shook it until all of the dirt sifted through and fell back into the garden bed or into a separate bucket, while the lava rocks remained on top of the hardware cloth.
We dumped the rocks into another container (5 gallon bucket, wheelbarrow, etc.) to be placed in a pile and disposed of at a later time.
After getting all of the lava rocks out of one bed, we replaced the dirt caught in the bucket back into the garden bed (sometimes we also just sifted the dirt straight into the bed instead of having a bucket below the hardware cloth to catch it, depending upon the size of the section we were working on, and how deeply embedded the lava rocks were in that section).
After we had completed an entire bed, we then laid down a biodegradable mulch.
This ended up being a much more efficient way to streamline an inherently arduous task. We hope this idea may be of use to anyone else out there who may have the goal of replacing any sort of rock mulch with a biodegradable mulch.



