06/12/2026
We only use the fabric under stone. Here’s why:
Landscape fabric was supposed to be the smart move. A one-time installation and no more weeds, right? If only that were true.
Here's what actually happens beneath that fabric over time, and why so many gardeners end up regretting ever unrolling it.
Landscape fabric is woven or spun from synthetic materials, and while it does block light, it does not block determination. W**d seeds blown in by wind or dropped by birds land on top of the fabric, germinate in the layer of mulch sitting above it, and send roots right through the weave. Within a few seasons, you often end up with MORE persistent weeds than before, because now their roots are physically entangled in the fabric itself, making removal a miserable chore.
The soil damage is the part that rarely gets discussed in the garden center aisle.
Healthy soil is not just dirt. It is a living ecosystem teeming with bacteria, fungi, protozoa, nematodes, and yes, earthworms. Earthworms alone perform an extraordinary service. According to research published in journals like Applied Soil Ecology, earthworm activity significantly improves soil aeration, drainage, and nutrient cycling. They pull organic matter downward and convert it into plant-available nutrients. Remove them from the equation and soil structure degrades. It compacts. It loses its ability to hold and move water effectively.
Landscape fabric blocks the natural transfer of organic matter from the surface down into the soil. Fallen leaves, decomposing mulch, and other organic inputs never reach the soil microbiome beneath. Over several years, the soil literally starves. What you see when you pull back that fabric is the evidence: pale, compacted, cracked, lifeless soil with zero biological activity.
The mycorrhizal fungi network that connects plant roots and helps them absorb water and phosphorus? Also severely disrupted or eliminated. Research from the U.S. Forest Service and soil ecology studies consistently show that soil disturbance and oxygen deprivation decimate fungal communities that take years to rebuild.
So what should you use instead?
Organic mulch applied 2 to 3 inches deep directly on bare soil is the gold standard recommendation from university extension programs including those from Penn State and Ohio State. Wood chips, shredded bark, and straw suppress weeds by blocking light, but they also break down over time, feeding the soil food web rather than suffocating it. Earthworms thrive beneath a good layer of organic mulch. Soil biology improves. Plants grow better.
For ornamental beds, thick mulch combined with regular hand-weeding is genuinely more effective long-term than fabric. For vegetable gardens, direct mulching or straw between rows works beautifully without the lasting harm.
Landscape fabric does have a narrow legitimate use: underneath hardscaping like gravel pathways or patios where no plant root zone is involved. That is where it belongs.
Pull it out of your planting beds. Your soil will thank you for the next decade. 🌱