Living Mulch Orchard and Vineyard Underseed Kit

SKU: BDL-LIVMULCH

$178.99 $35.80/lb
  • Seeding rate: 5 lbs per 2,000 sq ft (approximately 2.5 lbs per 1,000 sq ft for tree row understorey at this coverage)
  • 5 lb bundle
Total Price: $178.99
Estimated Delivery: 15-18 business days
Looking for more than 200 lbs?

What is the Living Mulch Orchard and Vineyard Underseed Kit?

The Living Mulch Orchard and Vineyard Underseed Kit is a three-species permanent ground cover blend designed for the zone immediately beneath tree rows and vine rows — one of the most agronomically important and most commonly mismanaged spaces on a farm. The understory under orchard and vineyard canopy is typically handled with herbicide strips, bare cultivation, or wood chip mulch. Each of these approaches has real limitations: herbicide strips damage soil biology and leave the soil bare and compaction-prone; bare cultivation increases erosion and degrades soil structure over time; wood chip mulch is expensive, finite, and must be replenished regularly.

Living mulch is the perennial alternative. The three species in this kit — White Dutch Clover (Trifolium repens), Microclover (Trifolium repens var. Pipolina), and Sheep Fescue (Festuca ovina) — were selected specifically because they stay low, tolerate partial shade and mowing, fix nitrogen, and build soil without competing with the water and nutrient needs of the trees or vines above. White Dutch Clover provides the bulk of the nitrogen fixation and the most visible pollinator flowering. Microclover is a dwarf variety of white clover selected to remain under 4 inches even without mowing, filling in spaces between the other species. Sheep Fescue is a slow-growing, fine-bladed grass that tolerates poor soils and drought, forming a dense low turf that physically blocks weed establishment between clover plants.

Specifications

Seeding Rate 5 lbs per 2,000 sq ft (approximately 2.5 lbs per 1,000 sq ft for tree row understorey at this coverage)
Sun Requirements Full Sun to Moderate Shade (tolerates the dappled light typical of established orchard and vineyard rows)
Time to Germinate Germination 7-14 days; functional ground coverage in 30-45 days; full establishment in one growing season

Seeding Specs

Water Needs Low to Moderate — drought-tolerant once established
Soil Preference Well-drained to moderately well-drained; Sheep Fescue tolerates sandy and low-fertility soils better than clovers
Soil pH pH 5.5-7.0; Sheep Fescue tolerates slightly more acidity than the clover component
Planting Depth 1/8 to 1/4 inch — all three species require very shallow seeding; broadcast and press firmly

Establishment Specs

Height Microclover: 3-6 inches; White Dutch Clover: 4-8 inches; Sheep Fescue: 6-12 inches (all mow-free or mow-low options)
Color White flowers (clover and microclover)
Uses Living Mulch, Orchard Floor, Vineyard Understorey, Pollinator Habitat, Nitrogen Fixation
Native/Introduced Introduced — all three species are European origin

Why Choose This Seed?

Nitrogen Fixation In-Row

White Dutch Clover and Microclover together provide meaningful nitrogen fixation directly beneath the woody plants that need it most. Under good establishment conditions, clover living mulch in an orchard can fix 50-100 lbs of nitrogen per acre per year — with a significant portion of that nitrogen mineralizing in the root zone of the trees as clover foliage decomposes and is trampled into the surface. Multiple university orchard trials have documented reduced or eliminated synthetic nitrogen requirements in orchards with established white clover living mulch compared to bare-strip or herbicide treatments. The clover must be mowed periodically (or grazed by poultry) to keep nitrogen cycling into the system rather than accumulating in perennial plant tissue.

Permanent Weed Suppression

Sheep Fescue forms a dense, fine-bladed turf that physically blocks weed seed establishment by closing the canopy at ground level. Unlike annual cover crops that must be reseeded each year, the Sheep Fescue in this kit is a long-lived perennial that densifies over time. The combination of Sheep Fescue turf and dense clover stolons creates a living mulch that suppresses annual weeds as effectively as 3-4 inches of wood chip mulch after the first full establishment season. In established orchards and vineyards, this means eliminating or dramatically reducing herbicide inputs in the tree row — one of the highest per-acre pesticide expenditures in commercial fruit production.

Pollinator Habitat

White Dutch Clover is one of the single most valuable pollinator plants available for managed agricultural landscapes. It flowers from late spring through early fall when not mowed, providing a continuous nectar and pollen source for honeybees, bumblebees, and over 40 species of native bees that also pollinate orchard and vineyard crops. Establishing clover directly under orchard canopy places pollinator forage exactly where pollinators need to be during bloom — within meters of the flowers they are pollinating. Research from Cornell and Washington State has documented higher fruit set and more uniform fruit sizing in apple and cherry blocks with high pollinator activity driven in part by orchard floor clover.

Low Maintenance Design

This kit is engineered to be as low-maintenance as possible for a living ground cover. Microclover is specifically selected to stay under 4-6 inches without mowing, which makes it the right species for tight rows where mower access is limited or where low plant height is required. Sheep Fescue is a slow-growing grass — in most orchard settings, it requires only 1-2 mowings per year to maintain desired height rather than the 4-8 mowings typical of conventional lawn grasses. White Dutch Clover spreads by stolons rather than requiring reseeding, self-repairing any bare spots opened by equipment or foot traffic. The combined maintenance requirement is substantially less than either an annual cover crop program or a conventional bark mulch program.

Soil Protection

Living root systems are the most effective protection against soil compaction and erosion available in high-traffic orchard and vineyard floors. Bare or cultivated tree rows are among the most compaction-prone areas on a farm — repeated equipment passes over exposed soil during spraying, harvesting, and pruning operations degrade soil structure year after year. The continuous root system of this living mulch mix maintains soil pore structure, encourages earthworm activity, and keeps rainfall infiltrating rather than running off. Long-term monitoring in organic orchards has consistently shown higher organic matter, greater aggregate stability, and better water infiltration in living mulch plots versus herbicide-strip controls.

How to Use the Living Mulch Orchard and Vineyard Underseed Kit

Site Prep

Reduce existing vegetation competition before seeding. In established orchard rows with herbicide strips, cultivate lightly to break surface crust and expose mineral soil. In rows with existing grass or weed cover, mow closely and overseed directly into the existing stand using a slit-seeder for best contact, or spray, wait 2 weeks, and then broadcast seed. Do not apply pre-emergent herbicides before seeding — they will prevent germination of all three species. Check soil pH: below 5.5, lime before seeding to bring pH to at least 5.8 for Sheep Fescue and 6.0+ for effective clover nodulation. No pre-plant fertilizer is needed; clover will establish without it and excess fertility early on can favor weed competition over the slow-establishing Sheep Fescue.

Seeding

Broadcast all three species together at the combined rate of 2.5 lbs per 1,000 sq ft. Mix the three seed bags together before broadcasting for even distribution, or broadcast each species separately in crossing passes for more uniform coverage. After broadcasting, roll firmly with a lawn roller, cultipack, or press with a board — the small seed sizes in this mix (especially microclover and white clover) require direct seed-to-soil contact and will have poor germination if left on a loose or fluffy surface. Inoculate the white clover and microclover seed with Rhizobium leguminosarum peat inoculant just before seeding if legumes are new to the area. Plant within 24 hours of inoculation.

Establishment

Germination begins in 7-14 days under adequate moisture. Clover seedlings are small and may be difficult to see at first — Sheep Fescue will typically be the most visible early growth. Do not mow for the first 45-60 days, allowing all three species to establish root systems. If weeds emerge and begin to overtop the seedlings, a single mow at 3-4 inches will set back annuals without harming the establishing perennials. Maintain soil moisture through germination in dry conditions; once established, all three species are drought-tolerant. Target coverage of 70-80% of the soil surface by end of the first growing season — any persistent bare spots should be hand-overseeded with the same mix.

Long-Term Maintenance

After the first season, this living mulch requires minimal inputs. Mow once or twice per year to 3-4 inches if height control is needed; microclover and Sheep Fescue can often go unmowed for a full season without becoming problematic. Do not apply nitrogen fertilizer to the living mulch — it will favor the grasses and weeds over the clovers and disrupt the nitrogen-fixation benefit. Apply phosphorus and potassium per soil test to maintain clover vigor over time. If clover content drops below 30% of cover after several years, overseed with 0.5-1 lb per 1,000 sq ft of white clover in early spring to refresh the stand. Avoid applying pre-emergent herbicides to established living mulch areas.

Questions & Answers

Will this mix compete with my trees or vines for water and nutrients?
This is the most important concern with living mulch in woody perennial systems, and it is a real agronomic trade-off. All ground covers compete with trees for some water and nutrients, particularly during dry periods. The species in this kit were selected to minimize that competition: Sheep Fescue and Microclover are both shallow-rooted and low in water demand relative to conventional turf grasses. Research from university orchard systems consistently shows that in rainfall-adequate climates (above 25 inches per year), clover-based living mulch does not reduce tree growth or yield compared to herbicide strip controls. In drier climates (below 20 inches annually), or in the first two years of tree establishment when root competition matters most, keep the tree trunk zone (2-3 foot radius) clear of living mulch by hand weeding or cultivation, and allow the living mulch to occupy only the inter-row and outer tree row area.
Does this mix work in full shade?
This mix tolerates dappled shade typical of established orchard canopy — approximately 3-4 hours of direct sun plus reflected light. In heavily shaded conditions with less than 2 hours of direct sun, Sheep Fescue will decline and the clover component will thin over time. For very dense shade environments, consider a shade-tolerant fine fescue blend or a creeping thyme-based mix instead. In younger orchards where canopy is still developing and sun is abundant, all three species will thrive and establish aggressively. As canopy closes over several years, the stand will naturally shift toward the more shade-tolerant components — white clover and microclover typically persist under light shade better than most grasses.
Can I overseed this into an existing orchard with established grass?
Yes, interseeding into existing orchard or vineyard sod is feasible and often preferable to full renovation — it minimizes disturbance to the existing soil structure and avoids a bare period. Use a slit-seeder (also called an overseeder or slice seeder) set to 1/4 inch depth to place seed directly into the existing sod. Mow the existing stand as closely as possible before overseeding. The clover components will establish between existing grass plants; Sheep Fescue will contribute more slowly in a competition-heavy environment. Reduce the seeding rate by 20% when interseeding into existing dense sod. Expect 2-3 growing seasons for the interseeded species to reach full expression in the stand.
How do I manage this mix if I use herbicides in the orchard?
Standard orchard herbicides — glyphosate, simazine, and other pre- and post-emergent compounds used in tree rows — will damage or kill the living mulch if contact occurs. If you use herbicides in your orchard, this mix is appropriate only for the areas you intend to manage herbicide-free. A common approach is to maintain this living mulch in the inter-row (between tree rows) where herbicides are not applied, while continuing to manage the in-row zone (within 2-3 feet of the trunk) with other methods. Herbicide drift onto clover and Sheep Fescue will cause damage; use shielded sprayers and careful timing if applying herbicides adjacent to established living mulch areas.
What is Microclover and how is it different from White Dutch Clover?
Microclover is a dwarf cultivar of white clover (Trifolium repens var. Pipolina) selected through decades of European turfgrass breeding to grow significantly smaller than standard white clover — typically staying under 4-6 inches in height compared to 6-10 inches for conventional white clover. It also produces smaller leaves and flowers, giving a finer texture than standard white clover. Microclover has less vigorous stolon spread than white Dutch clover, which means it is less likely to become invasive in areas where you do not want it. Both species fix nitrogen and feed pollinators; Microclover does so at a somewhat lower rate due to its smaller size, but it does both jobs at a height and spread that requires no mowing management. In this kit, they are combined because white clover provides more vigorous nitrogen fixation and establishment while microclover fills in low-clearance areas and requires no maintenance once established.
Can I graze this living mulch with chickens or ducks?
Yes, and orchard poultry integration is one of the best uses of this mix. Chickens and ducks grazing an orchard understory will consume clover, grass, and insects, cycling nutrients directly back into the soil through manure, while managing pest populations including codling moth, aphids, and slugs. Allow poultry access after the living mulch is fully established — at least 60-90 days after germination and ideally after the first full growing season. Stocking rate matters: too many birds on a small area will overgraze and thin the stand. A rough guideline is 50-100 meat chickens or 20-30 ducks per acre at any one time, rotated to allow 2-3 weeks of rest and regrowth between grazing events. White clover and Sheep Fescue both recover well from grazing pressure under light to moderate stocking.

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