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Hugelkultur: A Natural, Cheap Way to Make or Fill Garden Beds

A mound of sticks and tree debris is being piled together by a person.

Last Updated on August 10, 2023

Hugel-what? If you’ve heard the term “hugelkultur” floating around the gardening world but aren’t 100% sure what it’s all about, then you’ve come to the right place! Let’s explore hugelkultur: what it is, the benefits it offers, potential drawbacks, the best wood and other materials to use in hugelkultur, which materials to avoid, and last but not least, how to make a hugelkultur garden bed. 

What is Hugelkultur


Hugelkultur (pronounced hoogle-culture or hoogle-cool-tour) is a permaculture method of making garden beds by layering logs, branches, leaves, and other organic plant debris with compost and soil. In German, hugelkultur literally means “hill culture”. It has been practiced by natural farmers and gardeners around the world for centuries.

Traditionally, hugelkultur was primarily used to create mounded earthen garden beds at ground level, referred to as hugel beds or “hugelbeet”. Yet the concept is rapidly gaining popularity as a cost-effective way to fill raised garden beds, planter boxes, and containers too. Especially deep ones! 


Two hugelkultur beds are shown next to each other. The bed on the right is fully finished with half of the soil being covered in straw or sawdust and the bottom has been lined with giant rocks. The bed to the left is under construction as large rounds and logs of wood have been stacked into a semi rectangular shape. Next the rocks will be added to border the bed, followed by soil and compost.
Traditional mounded hugel beds in progress (source)

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A raised garden bed has been filled with wood logs, a wheelbarrow sits next to the bed full of smaller sticks.
When we recently installed our new garden, we took a nod to hugelkultur and added oak logs and branches to the bottom of several of the raised beds (though we didn’t have enough material for all 19). Learn how we build our raised garden beds here.


Benefits of Hugelkultur


  • Hugelkultur mimics nature by design. Akin to a forest floor, the variety of decomposing natural material creates immense biodiversity in the soil.

  • Rotting wood behaves much like a sponge: it absorbs, retains, and even releases water. Thus, hugelkultur garden beds require less water, ideal to conserve water and offset periods of drought.

  • As wood and other natural materials decay over time, worms, beneficial bacteria, fungi, nematodes, microbes and other members of the soil food web work to create and release nutrients that feed plants. This type of effective nutrient release can occur for up to 20 years, depending on the density and type of materials used in the hugelkultur bed. The bed improves with time.

  • Decomposing plant materials also generates some heat, which means the soil in hugel beds may warm up more quickly in spring to allow for earlier planting. This can also help extend the growing season come fall or winter, especially when coupled with hoops and row covers.

  • Hugelkultur garden beds are budget-friendly! Filling large raised beds or planter boxes with soil and compost alone can get quite expensive. Filling the beds (at least part way) with collected natural materials is very cost-effective in comparison. Mounded hugel beds may be totally free to make.

  • Hugelkultur garden beds are also eco-friendly. It’s a fantastic way to utilize and up-cycle plant “waste” around your property – rather than burning it or sending it to the landfill! Plus, creating garden beds from collected materials is more self-sufficient and sustainable than bringing outside materials into your garden. For example, bagged soil can create a lot of plastic waste! Whenever possible, get soil and compost delivered in bulk if large volumes are needed.
  • Hugel beds are excellent at sequestering carbon. They’re also naturally aerated and don’t need turning or tilling. 

  • Hugelkultur is a great way to overcome poor native soil conditions, such as clay or rocky soil.


A lush garden with various plants growing, the mound is slightly higher than the ground and has hay or straw covering its surface.
A diverse thriving hugel bed (source)
The top of a hugelkultur bed is visible amongst the blanket of snow surrounding it. The microbial activity of the bed is much higher than the surrounding area which creates more heat.
A tall hugel bed defrosting more quickly than other soil around it (source)


Potential Drawbacks of Hugelkultur


  • Creating or filling garden beds with the hugelkultur method requires access to ample natural materials – a challenge for some urban or suburban gardeners.

  • It requires a good deal of physical labor and effort to make traditional mounded hugel beds compared to standard in-ground garden plots. 

  • Hugelkultur beds may settle or sink down after the first year or so, so topping off with fresh soil and compost may be needed. Add soil and compost within the initial woody layers to reduce settling and air pockets.

  • There is some risk of introducing pests or disease to your hugelkultur beds by using infected materials. For instance, we have abundant oak leaf litter on our property, but the leaves are almost always covered in mealybugs or whitefly, so I avoid using them in hugel beds. Termite-infested material poses a similar concern, especially when filling new wooden raised garden beds hugelkultur-style.

  • Similarly, there is a risk of accidentally adding pesticides or herbicides to a hugelkultur garden – particularly if you’re using materials from an unknown source or not from your own property. Straw is a prime example, which is notoriously sprayed with herbicides and quite difficult to find organic.
  • Since they’re prone to attract termites, it’s best to keep hugel beds at least 30 feet away from your home.

  • Like other in-ground garden plots, it can be challenging to prevent burrowing pests like gophers or moles in traditional mounded hugelkultur beds. Gophers are a huge problem where we live, which is one of the primary reasons we garden in raised beds instead – and line the bottom of them with hardware cloth so they can’t get in.

  • Tall, mounded hugel beds with sloped sides can be prone to sloughing and sliding around the edges. It may also be difficult to access, harvest, or tend to plants near the top or middle of the mound. Since plants sit higher off the ground, they’re more susceptible to the elements like whipping winds or frost. 

  • Young hugel beds may become nitrogen-deficient, leading to stunted plants. Keep reading below.


A large, mounded hugelkultur bed that has various vegetables growing in it. It has been built alongside a fence and the bed looks to stand at least 4 feet tall.
Tall hugel beds create more surface area and even more planting space, though they can also be more tricky to harvest and work around. (source)


Does wood in hugelkultur beds steal nitrogen from the soil?


There is a notion that woody material (including logs, wood chips and branches) can “rob” nitrogen from soil. In reality, it doesn’t actually take any nitrogen away, but instead makes it temporarily unavailable for use by the plants – also referred to as nitrogen lock. Plants may be stunted as a result. Wood chips cause more noticeable nitrogen lock than large logs since wood chips offer significantly more surface area. Nitrogen lock can last for the first couple of years in a hugel bed, but then the nutrient becomes available to the plants again once. 

However, it is easy to compensate by adding adequate soil and compost above the woody material for plants to grow in – explained more to follow. Use mild organic slow-release fertilizers to supplement additional nitrogen if needed. Growing nitrogen-fixing cover crops in the off season (such as fava beans, alfalfa, buckwheat or rye) is another great way to naturally add nitrogen back to the soil. 


A diagram showing a cartoon hugel bed at different stages of its life and the effect on the plants growing in it. Each month or year that passes, the plantings become large with time and become one with the bed.
Within a couple of years, any initial nitrogen lock should subside. Diagrams from Paul Wheaton


Materials to Use in Hugelkultur Garden Beds


  • Logs or stumps, including fresh or rotting. Some that are already decaying is ideal! Read more about the pros and cons of different wood types below.
  • Branches and sticks
  • Wood chips, sawdust, wood ash
  • Leaves or leaf mold
  • Straw or hay
  • Compost and manure
  • Other organic yard and garden waste
  • Brown paper bags
  • Corn husks or stalks
  • Fresh grass clippings or dry grass (be cautious of introducing weeds though)
  • Chunks of sod, often removed from the site of the new hugel bed and placed grass-side down near the top of the mound after.
  • Cardboard, especially as an initial weed-suppressing layer under the bottommost logs. 


A large rectangular mound of large rounds of wood, logs, sticks, and pine needles. Next, soil or compost will be added to the mound until the wood is fully covered.
The base layers of a new hugel bed, before smaller materials, soil and compost are added.


What type of wood is best for hugelkultur?


There is definitely some debate about what types of wood to use or avoid in hugelkultur garden beds. There are no hard fast “rules”. And don’t forget: the point is to make use of resources that are readily available to you!

Overall, hardwoods are ideal for hugelkultur. Logs from hardwood trees – including oak, apple, beech, alder, maple, sweetgum, ash, poplar and acacia – will decompose slowly and therefore supply nutrients to your hugel bed over a longer period of time. Yet soft woods such as pine, spruce, or fir will break down and release nutrients more quickly, giving everything a boost from the get-go! So, you can certainly use both. (But we’ll talk more about pine below.)

For the best results, use a variety of tree types and also a combination of fresh and already-rotting wood in a hugelkultur bed. Decaying wood will immediately begin to release nutrients and also inoculate the soil with beneficial microbes and fungi. Meanwhile, fresh wood will be there to support your plants over the long haul. 


Materials to Avoid in Hugel Beds


Have you ever noticed that plants don’t grow well under some trees? Most permaculture resources recommend to avoid wood from allelopathic trees, or those that emit phytochemicals to suppress or even kill competing plant life around them.

Common examples of allelopathic trees include black walnut (the most notorious) as well as eucalyptus, sugar maple, sycamore, red oak, black locust, pepper, manzanita, American elm, and some pine species. However, all of these trees are allelopathic to varying degrees! Even more, they may only emit growth-inhibiting chemicals from certain parts of the tree, such as the roots or leaf litter only. 

This guide from The University of Georgia breaks down various allelopathic trees into “strong”, “moderate” and “slight” categories and also denotes what part of the tree expresses allelopathy. Referencing the guide, it’d be wise to avoid logs and branches from trees that express moderate to strong allelopathy in their “rls” (root, leaf, and stem) pathways. I wouldn’t be as concerned about those that express it in their roots alone. Similarly, avoid using leaf litter from trees where that’s the main pathway.

Don’t use black locust because it will not decompose. Cedar and redwood also aren’t the best choices due to their high levels of tannins and natural rot-resistance. Last but not least, be sure that any species prone to suckering or sprouting (e.g. willow) are fully dead and dry before adding it to your hugel bed.


 

An image of a tree and the different routes that allelopathy from trees can occur from root exudation, leaf and litter decomposition, leaching from precipitation, and microbial transformation from decaying tree material.
Potential routes of allelopathy from trees (source)


Can you use pine wood or pine needles in hugelkultur?


Yes, pine is fine to use in hugel beds! Especially in moderation (mixed with other wood types) and/or if it has been thoroughly dried and aged. Certain pine species are mildly to moderately allopathic, though in some instances that’s attributed to their needles rather than the wood itself. 

Pine needles are known to be very acidic (with pH of 3.8) and therefore are often avoided for hugelkultur or compost. However, it’s a rampant garden myth that pine needles make soil more acidic! The University of New Hampshire clarifies that “pine needles themselves are acidic but do not have the capacity to appreciably lower the soil pH”. As pine needles decompose, they’re gradually neutralized by organisms in the soil.


How to Make a Hugel Bed (or Fill Raised Garden Beds Hugelkultur-Style)


Whether you’re creating a traditional mounded hugel bed or filling a raised garden bed (planter box) hugelkultur-style, start with the largest, most dense materials on the bottom. Begin with logs and stumps first, then layer in smaller branches and twigs, followed by leaves or straw. Finally, top it all off with several inches of well-aged compost and soil. Experts recommend incorporating a small amount of soil and compost to fill voids throughout the inner layers as well.

It’s important to provide at least 6 inches of soil (I recommend 10-12 inches) on top of the woody material. This offers adequate space for roots to grow and plants to thrive, especially in early years before the under-layers start to decompose. So, take that into consideration when filling raised garden beds or planter boxes. For instance, if your planter boxes are only a foot tall, add a fairly shallow layer of woody material at the bottom of the bed. The hugelkultur method is most helpful when raised beds are 16 inches or deeper.

In the “soil” layer, combine about 40% topsoil, 40% compost and 20% aeration additives – such as ⅜” lava rock, pumice, perlite, coarse sand, rice hulls, coco coir or peat moss. However, high-quality potting soil already contains plenty of aeration ingredients and perhaps some compost too. In that case, adjust your ratios accordingly (e.g. 70% potting soil plus 30% compost).

To create traditional mounded hugel beds, you can pile materials right at ground-level. Or, dig a shallow depression or trench (the size of the bed) to fill. Add the soil removed from the trench to the top of the mound at the end. To define the bed shape and add dimension, use branches along all sides to make a rough “frame”. Some permaculturists also use large rocks around the edges.


A two part image collage, the first image shows a trench dug into the earth, the second image shows the beginning of a hugelkultur mounded bed. A man stands next to a trench that has been filled with various sticks and pieces of wood. Surrounding the area are rows of growing crops and trees.
Starting a hugel bed with a trench, then filling it with logs and branches, with more material to come on top after – including the sod and soil that was removed from the trench. (source)
A mounded raised bed lined with large rocks. There are a few plants growing on one side of the mounded bed.
Hugel beds with rock borders (source)
A raised wooden garden bed starting to be filled with debris hugelkultur style. Some large rounds and chunks of oak are on the bottom of the bed, next will be smaller sticks and debris.
Filling some of our new raised garden beds hugelkultur-style.
A newly built wooden raised garden bed filled with logs and bigger pieces of oak on the bottom with smaller sticks layered on top. The raised bed is filled roughly 2/3rds of the way with wood.
Next we should have added leaves or other smaller debris on top, but as I mentioned before, most of the oak leaf litter on our property seem to be covered in whitefly and mealybugs, so we opted to not add those and proceeded with soil and compost next.


And that concludes this lesson on hugelkultur gardens.


As you can see, hugelkultur offers many benefits in the garden. It’s natural, cost-effective, repurposes waste, and pretty fun to boot! I hope you learned something new today, and feel excited to try hugelkultur in your garden too. Please feel free to ask any questions you may have in the comments below. If you found this information to be valuable, please consider pinning or sharing this post! Thank you very much for tuning in. Happy gathering and hilling!


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DeannaCat signature, keep on growing

Deanna Talerico (aka DeannaCat) is a garden educator and writer with over 15 years experience in organic gardening. She is a retired Senior Environmental Health Specialist, and holds a M.A. in Environmental Studies and B.S. in Sustainability and Natural Resources.

22 Comments

  • KJ

    Omgosh. I put forsythia branch clippings in my bed today! I’m so concerned now. Do you know if it’s going to be a problem? Sprout..grow a tree? 🙁 I already buried it.

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi KJ, while forsythia will readily root and can grow quite vigorously but we don’t have a lot of experience with forsythia either. I wouldn’t think being buried in your hugel bed would be the most optimal environment for the clippings to root as they will hopefully start to decompose before then but I can’t say for sure. Fingers crossed the clippings won’t root on you, if you’ve already buried it all, not sure there is much you can do now besides wait. Good luck!

  • Robin

    Hi Aaron and Deanna,
    I love your website and videos! Very inspiring! And proving so helpful as I am setting up some raised beds. I would like to fill them using the hugelkulture method and I have some questions about appropriate materials. I recently pruned back some overgrown rhododendrons and fatsia and I have a large pile of their branches and leaves. I also dug out a large butterfly bush last year and still have that. And I have a juniper that rotted and had to be dug out as well. Also, there is a pile of mystery firewood that has been sitting in the corner of my property for years. I’m not sure what it is. Would these be appropriate to use in the beds? Thank you for your advice!

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Robin, thank you for the kind words! As far as adding materials to hugel your raised beds, most of the leafy plant material should be fine as it will likely break down rather quickly once everything is up and running even though rhododendron are considered allelopathic. I think juniper is said to contain a lot of resin and may take too long to break down in a hugelkultur setup so I am not sure that is the best choice, the same goes for your mystery firewood, unless you have a good idea of the type of wood that it likely might be due to the type of trees that you have around your property? Black walnut, juniper, cedar, spruce, osage orange for the most part should be avoided as even if the allelopathic properties in some of them aren’t a concern, they may take quite some time to break down compared to other wood. In all, they can still likely be used, it just may take awhile for the hugel beds to fully break down the wood and operate the way they are supposed to. Hope that helps and good luck!

    • Roberta McKeehan

      Hugelkultur is adaptable to any climate. Flatten the mound. Give it a wider base. Use a very thick layer of mulch. Install a drip irrigation system or use multiple bottles of water with holes poked in the bottoms buried around the outer edges of the mound. I’m using a modified system in large pots in a small yard. I add all my compostables on top of the wood along with earthworms to mimic a natural ecosystem. I top that with depleted potting mix or whatever I have on hand. Any container can work. The used stock tank should be perfect with large holes covered with wire mesh to keep the soil from falling through. It should be raised onto blocks which will help with drainage and keep tree roots from growing into it. Stop using peat for anything. It is a major carbon storage system. When disturbed it gives off great quanties of carbon. Great article! Thank you.

    • jim purdy

      About 75 years as a woodsman/farmer in Canada……….poplar and birch rot the fastest, alder bushes and fir close. jim

  • Maria

    After the recent storms here in Santa Cruz, I was wondering if I could gather wood from the beach for this. Obviously not using any wood treated like from a pier, but the beaches are loaded with wood right now. Many just from falling trees upriver. Do you think the salt water might be a problem to use this way? Of course I’m thinking free wood+beach clean up and hoping for a win/win.

    Thoughts?

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Maria, we weren’t hit as hard as Santa Cruz with the recent weather but we are seeing a lot of debris being washed ashore as well, using wood from the beach should work well for a hugelkultur bed and like you said, use natural wood/branches and nothing from the pier or other treated type material. Maybe just rinse off the wood fairly well to get any salt off beforehand but I think you should be good to go from there. Adding some smaller sticks or leaves on top will help accelerate the decomposition of the material as well. Hope that helps and good luck picking up the beach.

  • Erica

    What a great site you have here we are on the gulf of Mexico in Florida 40 miles above Tampa it’s hot and humid in summer, stuff grows well , would this type of gardening work here ?

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Erica, absolutely it will work in more humid and tropical environments, the organic matter will break down even more quickly with the warm and moist environment. Hope that helps and have fun growing!

  • Mayo Earnest

    Your article really intrigued us!
    We are on an island in the Pacific Northwest. We have dry summers in the 70s and wet winters w temps 25 to 40. We are considering hugelkultur in our new stock tanks. We will drill holes through the bottoms. Do you think this will work for us? Thanks for any advice you can provide!

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Mayo, it should work great in your location with all of the available rotted wood and other organic material that is readily available. The one area I would use caution is drainage, even if you drill holes in metal stock tanks, there can still be areas for water to settle in the tanks while not effectively draining, this leads to anaerobic conditions which are not great for soil health. If there is a way to effectively remove the bottom of the tanks, that may be the best option, or at the very least, be prepared to drill many holes in the bottom of each tank, most likely the bigger the holes the better, 3/4″ and upwards to allow for proper drainage, especially so since your native soil is likely quite rich and full of microbial activity which will then become a part of your beds as well. Hope that helps and good luck!

  • Cheyenne

    Soaking the logs and pouring fermented weed tea over them would add lots of nutrients along with moisture, watering the soil as it’s added, and mulching well helps along with making tall berms alongside one another so as to create shade.

  • Mike

    I’m in the process of filling a bed this way now. I had an oak tree fall in my yard a couple of years ago. I can’t get heavy machinery into the yard without taking out my neighbors shrubs and fences so I chopped, chipped and split the whole thing. I put some left over branches, the rotting, broken up stump and wood chips along with grass in the first layers and watered it heavily. I can tell it absorbs very, very well. Would you recommend a layer of a heavy nitrogen fertilizer to counterbalance the wood before I get much topsoil in there?

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Hi Mike, that sounds like a good use of a fallen tree! I would be opt to at least top dress the wood bits with alfalfa meal, neem seed meal, or a well balance organic fertilizer just to kick start the decomposition process. The use of high quality compost may also help out in that regard as well. Hope that helps and good luck with your hugelkultur bed!

  • PMR

    Although its a fascinating technique, traditional hugelkultur beds don’t work in very dry climates, as the soil in the mound dries out very quickly. We can’t use traditional hugelkultur mounds in Andalucia, Spain, as it is simply too hot and dry here in the summer!

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      I would tend to agree with that notion as any image I have of hugelkultur usually involves more densely wooded and wet conditions. I am sure some of the technique would work in more dry conditions but likely not such a huge mound, maybe deeper trenches or in raised beds with routine watering.

  • Andrew Leon Speakerman , Jr.

    That article on hugelkultur was just fascinating . I was not familiar with that method or that word , but it reminds me of a method I used in my younger days . Those methods work particularly well in a heavy clay soil . You’re the coolest . GB

  • April

    Really informative article Deanna. I’ve been wondering about implementing the hugelkuktur method in my mountain gardens specifically because I have an abundance of pine wood, branches & needles!

    I also really liked the article you linked about allelopathic trees. I have several beds under black walnut trees and everything grows well in them but I just created a new one and I’m going to incorporate some veggies so it will be interesting to see if the roots affect them but hopefully they’re far enough firm that it won’t be a problem.

    Thanks for another great article🧡

    • Aaron (Mr. DeannaCat)

      Sounds like you have an abundance of material to use April! Good luck on your bed near the black walnut tree and let us know how it turns out, good luck and have fun growing!

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